This church, overlooking the village of Saint-Sauveur, depended on the commandery of Foucaudière founded by the order of the Antonines in 1366. Devastated during the Hundred Years' War, it was repaired for the first time (end of the 1493th century) then thanks to numerous donations, underwent a vast campaign of work led by Commander Laurent Imbert in 1567. The church was almost completely renovated in a flamboyant Gothic style characterized by the rich decoration of the bays, the braced arches or the pointed ribs. multiple ribs (prismatic). Burned in 1776, during the Wars of Religion, it was restored at the beginning of the XNUMXth century. The order of the Antonines, until then flourishing, declined and only two canons resided at the commandery when in XNUMX the order was attached to the Knights of Malta. During the Revolution, the church was sold as national property. Very quickly, according to the wishes of the commune, an exchange was carried out with the Saint-Sauveur parish church. The Foucaudière church then became a new parish under the names of Saint-Sauveur and Saint-Antoine.