Built from 1510 to 1519 in a flamboyant gothic style, the church is classified as a historical monument. A set of six Flemish tapestries, dating from the mid 17th century, is displayed in the nave.
The first church of this name was built at the beginning of the 12th century, on the return from the first crusade. Destroyed during the Hundred Years' War, it was rebuilt inside the rampart erected by Philippe-Auguste, but its small size led to the construction, on the present site, of a third church of the Holy Sepulchre, consecrated in 1519. To be discovered: the classified woodwork of the choir, the painting of the litanies of the Virgin which would be a vestige of the first church, a superb Christ of pity, the stained glass windows of the Master glassmaker Jacques Gruber, the tapestries of Brussels.