The village church Brohm is an early gothic fieldstone church with baroque equipment
The church in Brohm is a hall building with an indented rectangular choir in carefully executed fieldstone masonry from the late 13th century. On the east gable of the choir there is a blind articulated gable in brickwork. A barrel-vaulted sacristy is attached to the north of the chancel. The building is accessed by a pointed-arch stepped portal in the west and in the south. There is another smaller priest's portal on the south side of the choir. The portals on the south side are decorated with profiled imposts and incised drawings. South side, western portal The choir east wall has a group of three windows in a screen. The remaining windows were probably enlarged in the 15th century. Although the pointed arches on the portals and windows and the date of origin suggest the stylistic attribution of the building to the Gothic period, this can only be considered a rough categorization for such rural-archaic buildings. Priest's portal at the choir In 1716, the church was provided with a half-timbered roof tower with a tent roof, which was reduced to the belfry in 1949. Inside, the building was also remodeled in the Baroque style around 1716. In the choir, a stuccoed mirror vault with bandelwerk decoration and allegorical figures was installed, as well as a ceiling painting with angels and the eye of God above an illusionistically painted balustrade, while the nave was provided with a wooden barrel vault with a depiction of the Ascension of Christ