In 1848, the Russian Slavist Victor Grigorovich wrote in his Essay on Travels in European Turkey that the inhabitants of Laki were Turks and Christians.
[2] In the Ethnography of the Provinces of Adrianople, Monastir and Thessaloniki, published in Istanbul in 1878 and reflecting the statistics of the male population from 1873, Lika (Laki) is listed as a village with 81 households with 40 Muslims and 230 Bulgarians.
[4] “ In 1889, Stefan Verkovic (Topographical and Ethnographic Essay of Macedonia) noted Lika (Laki) as a village with 63 Bulgarian and 18 Turkish houses.
[5] The main source of income for the people, living in the village is agriculture and livestock breeding.
The cemetery church "St. Archangel Michael" was built in the XVI - XVII century, and "Assumption" - in 1844 and a cell school was opened next to it.