Built in 1464, it has undergone important renovations and notable changes in style over the years, such as the works due to the adaptation to post-conciliar legislation in 1970 that disturbed the existing dignified neo-Romanesque space, now denied by a wooden false ceiling and a cantilevered tribune; the church was also stripped of the precious stained glass windows and private of the three marble altars of Trento. The restoration of 2002 highlighted the perimeter crosses and again exposed the nineteenth-century "Via Crucis" by the Cavaliere painter Carlo Vanzo.
The apse is dominated by the large wooden crucifix by the Swabian sculptor Sayfert (1525).