The extremely simple little church has a single entrance portal with two windows to each side and an oculus in the upper portion, beneath the pitched roof.
The church is believed to be extremely old, and it is likely that it coincides with the location of the 11th century finding of a painting of St. Victoria that had miraculously survived the Saracen raid which demolished the church completely.
The present appearance of the church suggests that a radical remodelling took place in the late 18th – early 19th century.
It is, therefore, probable that the placing of the painting of St. Victoria (now kept in the Parish Church of St. Paul), and the relative altar frame, on the main altar dates to the same time. At the turn of the century, the church was entrusted to the Diocesan Seminary, but soon fell into ruin, which made it necessary to move the altar piece and the ancient painting elsewhere.
The Association of St. Victoria, who reformed at Pisoniano several years ago, paid for the rebuilding of the church and placed a forgotten painting of the saint, found in the parish church sacresty, on the altar.
The miraculous water source that sprung at the foot of the altar was moved at the turn of the last century to several hundred metres distance from the church.






























