A village on the Ciemięga river on the Nałęczów Plateau. The parish church of st. John the Baptist has preserved. The present shape of the church was acquired in the second half of the XVI century. In 1563, the temple was taken over by the Arians and only in 1610 it returned to the possession of the Catholics. At the beginning of the XVII century, the church was rebuilt, gaining the features of the Lublin Renaissance style, probably under instructions of the guild mason Jan Wolff. The new vault was covered with stucco decorations in the form of torus mouldings. It is a single-nave temple with a narrower, closed semicircular chancel, adjoining the sacristy with a vestibule. On the west side of the nave there is a tower with a porch. The Rococo interior is mostly from the second half of the XVIII century. In the main wooden altar hangs a painting from the beginning of the XIX century depicting the baptism of Christ. The side altars feature paintings of Joseph with the Child (XIX century) and of the Virgin with the Child (XVIII century). The church complex also includes a brick belfry (XIX century) and a parish house from 1905, funded by Count Zamoyski.