All the villages in the Pisino area enjoyed in Medieval times a degree of relative autonomy.
[4][5] Remarkable sights in the town include the church of St. Peter and Paul the Apostle with three beautiful Renaissance altars and a painted baptismal font from the 17th century.
[6] There is the small church of the Blessed Virgin Mary, located on the hilltop on the right side, at the entrance of the settlement, dating from the Romanesque period.
[6] On the main square, in front of the parish church, there is the house of the De Franceschi family, built in 1711.
[6] The village also features a stone inscription dedicated to the alleged local Mikula Gologoricki, mentioned in the 13th-century document Istrian Demarcation.