This Romanic temple has altarpieces in neoclassic carving. On the inside, improved on the 19th century, it stands out the Romanic arch from the main chapel that settles in columns with decorated capitals, of which has mermaids. The nave walls are covered with sixteen hundreds glazed tiles.
The Church of San Isidoro is one of the most interesting and best preserved testimonies to Romanesque of the current municipality of Marco de Canaveses. This church, together with that of Tabuado, standardizes the Romanesque Lower Tâmega, both in the Organization of space as in the arrangement of the elevations, in the typology of openings and in like rank in rosettes. This church conserves one of the most interesting murals produced in Portugal in the first half of the 16th century.
Civil architecture buildings, medieval and Renaissance. The Palace was converted into hostels, which had medieval origin, by order of the rainha Santa Mafalda, to his residence. The chapel features Mannerist taste facade.
The earliest documentary reference 1079 date from the mid-12TH century belonged to the Canons of Saint Augustine. The Church preserves Romanesque construction elements as the arcades of the western façade. Is to highlight the amount of epigraphs and chests for coffin that can be dated between the 11TH and 14th centuries.