The Parish Church of St. Michael in Oklaj from the 18th Century
According to the inscription above the gable of the front door of the west frontier, the church was built in 1784. There is also a mention of an older church of St. Michael built in 1550 and rebuilt in 1716 after the departure of the Ottomans. Due to the increasing needs of the parish, a larger and more spacious church was built in the 18th century. It is a single-nave church with a small choir and a semicircular apse added in 1880. The frontage of the church is marked by a rustic rosette and one square window on each side of the portal. On the sides of the church there are elongated, arched windows and on the apse a low, semicircular windows. The inner walls of the church are divided by shallow pilasters. Inside the church there is a large Late Baroque marble altar made in 1872 and decorated with statues which was completely destroyed during the Homeland War. A multi-storey bell tower with a pyramidal belfry was built next to the church in 1798. Horizontal cornices, reliefs and monophores and bifores are indicators of a high quality construction. The church is classified and protected as a cultural monument.
During the Homeland War, the church was looted and set on fire, and many graves were desecrated. The bell tower remained intact, and renovation of the church began in 1996.
Church of Our Lady of the Well in Lukar from 18th century
The church was built in 1977, confirmed by the inscription in the lunette above the main portal. It is dedicated to the Nativity of Mary. A stone rosette stands out on the Late Baroque frontier, which ends with a bell tower. It was built on the foundation of an Old Croatian church from the 10th century or later, which was stated as the parish of Hotiblić – Lukar in 1630. This church was the first parish church in Promina until a larger and more spacious one was built in the center of the parish – Oklaj. The new 18th century church of Our Lady in Lukar is a single-nave church with a square apse and a wooden choir carried by stone pillars. In 1925, a large marble altar was built, dedicated to Our Lady of the Well. A bell tower was added to the church in 1937, but was badly damaged by grenades in September 1991. The church is classified and protected as a cultural monument.
As well as other churches, this church was also looted and damaged inside and out. It is surrounded by a spacious graveyard where a certain number of graves were also desecrated during the war. The church and the bell tower were renovated in 1996.
St. Martin's Church in Mratovo, 15th-19th century
This newer church was built in 1841. It has a polygonal octagonal shape with chapels that form a cross floor plan. The semicircular windows between the chapels illuminated the central part of the church, as well as the small windows on an octagonal tholobate under the roof. In 1969 a new stone altar was built and behind it there was a large crucifix which was significantly damaged during the Homeland War. The church has Classical features and is a rare example within Dalmatian architecture. Along with this larger church, an older small church mentioned in 1412 has also been preserved, and now it serves as a sacristy for the newer church. It has a barrel vaulted roof covered by stone slabs and a Baroque bell tower on its side. It is surrounded by a graveyard which was damaged and desecrated, and the church itself was looted and set on fire.
All Saints Church in Razvođe, 19th century
This church is one of the smaller single-nave churches with Late Baroque features from the second half of the 19th century. It was built in 1867. The main frontier is marked by a portal with profiled stone lintels and frames and two square windows (originally arched) and stone rosette. At the top of the frontier there is a bell tower on a pediment with two bells. There are semicircular windows on the longitudinal walls of the church. A large stone altar which was placed in the square apse (the first mayor of Promina Marko Škovrlj had it built) was completely destroyed. During the war the church was looted and set on fire, at the same time the altar was destroyed. The church is classified and protected as a cultural monument and its renovation started in 1996.
Church of the Holy Spirit in Matasi, 20th century
Church of the Holy Spirit in Matasi is the youngest Catholic church in Promina. The church was built of concrete in the 1970s and the architect that designed it is Damir Perinić. It is approximately the same size as the Church of All Saints in Razvođe. During the Homeland War the church suffered considerable damage, but it remained in one piece. Out of all the mentioned churches which were set on fire and damaged in the Homeland War, this was the only one where the church bell was left intact.
Its architecture is quite different from other buildings that retain traditional stylistic features. The church has an elongated semicircular floor plan. On the main frontier, the left side is convexly curved and the right one is flat and has a simple entrance with a wooden double wing door. There is a tile covered eaves above the entrance on top of which is a semicircular bell frame with a cross on top, perforated with two elongated semicircular openings to accommodate the bell.
The church was set on fire during the Homeland War, the most damaged part was the interior, but it was reconstructed in 2003, and in 2019 the facade was repainted.
Chapel of St. Rocco in Čitluk
Chapel of St. Rocco in Čitluk was built in 1860 next to the parish house on the foundations of the older one. A data of a church from 1630 at that exact spot can be found in the diocesan archives, as well as a fact that pastors have been living in the parish house next to it since the middle of the 18th century. The house was upgraded in 1858 and a new one was built in 1979.
The chapel was built in 1860 on the foundations of the older church mentioned in 1630. The new church kept the stone decorations of the previous one, as well as a small bell tower on a pediment. There was a baroque marble altar in the church brought there in the 1960s from the church of St. Michael in Oklaj, On the 125th anniversary the interior of the church was restored and decorated with new works of art (relief representing Jesus and Mary and a brass relief The Way of the Cross, the work of academic sculptor Josip Poljan from Zagreb, commissioned by Mirko Validžić Ćelkanović). The church was looted and set on fire during the Homeland War. After 1996 the church was restored, as was the parish house and the square with the well in front of the church.
Orthodox Church of St. Domenica in Razvođe
Orthodox church of St. Domenica in Razvođe was built in the 1980s on the Orthodox cemetery. Prior to the construction of this church, there was no Orthodox church in Promina. It is architecturally similar to the Catholic churches in Promina – single-nave longitudinal space closed by an apse. The apse is polygonal and hexagonal, the two central walls are dissolved by elongated, semicircular windows. The side facades are dissolved by windows of the same type, three of them on each side. On the south facade, under the central window, there is a side door locked with a triangular gable. In the central axis of the facade is an avant-corps protrusion and a six-sided bell tower closed by a dome next to it. The walls of the bell tower are dissolved by small semicircular windows. On the avant-corps there is a semicircular opening with a rectangular wooden door above which is a semicircular lunette. There is also a small circular window with a profiled cornice above it. The facade is beige, while the borders of windows and doors are painted white. This church was not damaged during the Homeland War.