The church dedicated to Saint Etienne

The church of Yquebeuf is dedicated to Saint Etienne. It was rebuilt because the previous one was close to ruin. In 1769, the nave and bell tower were rebuilt. The single-ship building does not have a transept. At the bottom of the nave, above the door, is a bell tower. The structure is made of bricks and sandstone with buttresses to stiffen the construction. In 1771, the parish priest Pierre Grouard had the choir built at his own expense, and on 5 April 1772 this choir and nave were blessed. In 1778, the same parish priest commissioned an altar from Jacques-Guillaume Vauquelin, a famous architect of the time (he was the author of the chapel of the Charles Nicolle Hospital in Rouen). This altar is now classified. Father Grouard was appointed dean of Cailly in 1788.

Until the revolution, the bell tower of Yquebeuf housed two bells. In 1793 one of them was abducted and brought to the Jacobins in Rouen. This bell had been melted in 1754 by Noel Etienne Girard founder in Beauvais. The second, preserved in 1793, was replaced by one of the Esteville church in the 1880s.

It had been melted in 1764 by Antoine Poisson, a renowned founder from Rouen, baptized in 1764 by Father Cosnefroy, priest of the parish of Esteville, and named Marie Françoise Hortense by Sir Louis Robert de Saint Victor and noble lady Marie Françoise Hortense Bon.

The impost above the door contains a fragment of a canopy from the old church. This stained glass window represents a coat of arms which was chosen for the village blazon in 1994.