Before the
Third Swedish Crusade (1293–1295), the islands paid tax to
Novgorod; after the crusade they became Swedish. In 1721 they became part of Russia, and in 1812 they were restored to the
Grand Duchy of Finland with the province of
Vyborg. In independent
Finland they belonged to the parish then called Koivisto (Swedish:
Björkö). The main settlement on the islands was then called
Saarenpää (Krasnoostrovskiy). The islands gave their name to the
Treaty of Björkö (1905). After World War II, they were ceded by Finland to the
Soviet Union. The whole historical Finnish population was expelled and replaced by a population of Soviet origin from September 1944 onwards. Place names were russified after 1947 concurrently with the rest of the formerly Finnish Karelian Isthmus occupied in 1944. == See also ==