The Church of San Vicente Mártir is the main Catholic church in Villarrasa. Originally built in the 14th century in the Mudejar style, it has undergone various transformations over the centuries, especially after the damage suffered during the Spanish Civil War. The current structure, in the Neo-Mudejar style, was reopened for worship in 1954.
The original church dates back to the 14th century, with a Mudejar construction reflected in its simple stone façade and the bull’s-eye window above it. Over the centuries, it has undergone several renovations, the most significant being between 1785 and 1798, when the structure was enlarged and reinforced, including the replacement of the wooden bell tower with a stone one. After the damage suffered in 1936, it was rebuilt and reopened for worship in 1954.
The building has a three-nave floor plan, with the central nave being higher and wider than the side naves. The main nave is covered by a truss roof, while the side naves have a single-sloped roof. The transept, delimited by four stilted arches, is covered with a half-orange dome. The bell tower stands next to the chancel of the church, with a bell tower topped by a tiled spire.
The main altarpiece features gilded plasterwork on a marbled background. On the altar table is a small crucifix from the first half of the 16th century. Two silver lamps hang from the base of the transverse arches, one from the 18th century and the other from the 19th century. The paintings decorating the presbytery are by Juan Montes.
The Gospel nave is presided over by the niche of Jesús Nazareno, a dressed image by Antonio Castillo Lastrucci dating from 1940. Further along the nave, the altarpiece of Las Ánimas, made by Joaquín Moreno Daza in 1954, contains a painting of the Virgen del Carmen by Juan Montes, also from 1954. The Virgen de los Dolores, an anonymous 19th-century work from Seville, is worshipped on a simple altar.
The chapel of the Tabernacle is accessed through an iron gate dating from 1951. The gilded and marbled wooden altarpiece was carved by Joaquín Moreno Daza in 1956. The vault and side walls are decorated with paintings by Juan Montes.
Finally, you can also visit the Mudejar-style door at the foot of the chapel, although it is currently blocked. On the lintel of the entrance door is a ceramic panel allegorical to Saint Vincent Martyr, made in Seville in the mid-18th century, depicting the saint with the palm of martyrdom, a raven and a pitchfork.



