The parish church of San Bartolomeo belonged to the Augustinian monks until 1180, and was returned to them in 1246, after being managed by the secular clergy for about sixty years.
The term "ecclesia S. Bartholomei de loco Bregancii" highlights the ancient link with the parish of Breganze, but following the dispute that broke out in 1281 between the archpriest of Breganze and the prior of San Bartolomeo, the Bishop of Padua Giovanni Forzatè de Transalgardi declared the monastery - along with its assets and parishes - exempt from the jurisdiction of the archpriest. In later documents (1297), it is referred to as "Hospitale S. Bartholomei de Farra".
In 1438, the monastery, along with the cloister and the refectory already in a poor state, after being in the possession of the canons of San Giorgio in Alga for some time, passed by papal bull to the "mensa of the Cathedral Chapter of Padua", which enjoyed the tithes and appointed the curate until July 1888: the community and the confraternity of the Conception of the Virgin Mary instead appointed the two chaplains.
The church, which at the end of the 18th century had three altars, was reconstructed between 1851 and 1859 in neoclassical style and with a single nave. Insufficient for its needs, it was expanded in the 1930s with two side naves and an apse, while the façade was completed in 1970.
Inside, the altarpiece of the main altar depicting the Virgin Mary between Saint Lucy and Mary Magdalene is the work of Jacopo da Ponte, a famous painter from Bassano in the 16th century.