The village has been mentioned since the 13th century. The most valuable monument here is the church of St. Catherine of Alexandria, dating from the turn of the 13th and 14th centuries, one of the oldest Gothic churches in the Chełmno Land and, for this reason, probably well known to Nicolaus Copernicus. Like other monuments representing the so-called Teutonic Gothic style, the church is built of stone and brick and has a single nave. The medieval furnishings of the temple are also noteworthy: ceramic figurines of saints from the mid-14th century, a 14th-century terracotta bas-relief depicting a two-headed deer, a 15th-century sculpture of St. John, a sculpture of Mary with the Child from around 1500, and a late Gothic patron's bench from the 16th century. 1500, as well as a late Gothic patron's bench from the 16th century.