The peninsula was settled by
Novgorodians not later than the 13th century. The
Pomors, living at the coast, are the descendants of the Novgorodians. Most of the villages on the coast of the peninsula have a historical significance. The ensemble of the
Purnema Pogost, consisting of St. Nicholas' Church (1618) and the Nativity Church (1860), and the
Zaostrovsky Pogost in the village of
Nyonoksa, consisting of the Church of the Presentation of Jesus in the Temple (1683-1688) and the St. Michael Church (1776-1785), are protected at the federal level as a monument of architecture. The village of Lopshenga was featured in the works of
Yury Kazakov, a Russian short story writer who traveled extensively in the Russian North. The name of one of the Kazakov's books of short stories is
Poedemte v Lopshengu — Let us go to Lopshenga. ==Economy and transportation==