It responds to the Romanesque style, and has interesting capitals inside. In the atrium of the church and adjoining estates, important archaeological remains were found. In 1951, researcher Manuel Chamoso Lamas discovered a Roman-Swabian necropolis, with burials dating from the first to the eighth century AD. The findings also reveal the possible existence of a Roman villa.
In Tines the Funerary Stele of Victorino was found, which may be one of the first Christian testimonies of Galicia, dated between the fourth and fifth centuries. This stone is currently kept in the Archaeological Museum of A Coruña.