Pre-history and ancient era The Lamon plateau shows traces of frequentation since prehistoric times, as evidenced by the discovery of numerous objects in stone and flint. Among other things, the remarkable discovery of a prehistoric hunter occurred in 1988 in Val Rosna, on the supramontine side of the Cismon. More recently, remains of fauna fossils were found in the cave of San Donato, including the remains of the
Ursus spelaeus, a large bear that was spread over the Alpine arc (today a skeleton, composed of bones of different specimens, is present in the atrium of the town hall). Research carried out by middle school students in the hamlet of Guana in 1997 uncovered arrowheads, scratchers, cores and sickle elements (flint blades) attributable to farmers who lived in the late
Neolithic period (3000 BC). In historical age, for the territory of Lamon, as the rest of Feltrino, the toponymic evidence confirms the news of
Pliny the Elder, according to which the
municipium of
Feltria (and its territory which also included the Lamonese plateau) was inhabited by Rhaetian people, distinct from the Gallic people of nearby
Bellunum. Also present were
Etruscan populations who fled the territory of
Felsina and the
Etrurian plains between 450 and 350 BC. The latter, like the Reti, did not speak an Indo-European language, but instead included the
Venetic language, Celtic dialects,
Latin and
Greek. The niches carved in the rock of the Colle di San Pietro, at the height of the cave now dedicated to the devotion to the Virgin Mary, are perhaps attributable to this period. With the establishment of the
municipium of
Feltria, the Lamon plateau was affected by Romanization, especially following the preparation of the
Via Claudia Augusta (today in the Lamonese tract called 'via pagana') which from
Altinum reached
Augusta Vindelicum (Augusta), in the province of
Raetia. The road, traced by
Drusus and "fitted" by
Claudius, passed directly (or a branch of it, the question is still debated) through the Lamonese territory in the direction of
Castello Tesino. A settlement developed in the first centuries of the Christian era, where the hamlet of stands today, a geomorphologically suitable point for controlling the street. This is evidenced by the findings of the necropolis located downstream of today's hamlet, from which objects of burial tombs have been discovered. Recently the area has been the subject of investigations by the Superintendency which has highlighted several 2nd and 3rd century AD burials. The recovered objects are now kept in an exhibition in Lamon. Within these investigations, the wall structures at Col Furlan were also highlighted, perhaps related to the Castle of San Donato referred to in oral tradition. A second housing nucleus developed around the already popular San Pietro hill, on which it is believed that a tower was placed in order to be visually connected with other observation points located along the route of the road in the nearby
Sovramonte plateau. Between the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century various finds from the Roman era (tombs, jewels, coins) came to light on the hill and in the surrounding area. The belt of the control stations on the Roman road finished at the Castle of Valdeniga (whose ruins were still visible in the nineteenth century). These fortresses originated in the late ancient age and then developed in the early medieval and medieval ages. In fact, in the late antiquity, the importance of the
Via Claudia Augusta did not decrease. Both for the Empire and for the Germanic people, it was a path of great fruition in the 4th to 6th centuries AD. Proof of this is the
Calice argenteo del Diacono Orso (silver chalice of the Deacon Bear, 6th century AD), by far one of the greatest finds of Christianity and the oldest in the Christian West. It was recovered in 1836 in a ravine near San Donato, in the Coronini area. The inscription, written in capital letters, quotes: DE DONIS DEI URSUS DIACONUS SANCTO PETRO ET SANCTO PAULO OPTULIT. It probably testifies to the birth of the diocese of
Feltre in the fifth century AD. According to some, the object belonged to the deacon Ursus, who carried out a permanent and itinerant service; the chalice would have been kept in the cathedral of
Feltre and hidden when the
Lombards arrived. For others, however, a chalice of this invoice would have belonged to episcopal seats of much higher prestige,
Concordia or
Aquileia, and would have been subject to raiding and therefore hidden along the route of the
Via Claudia Augusta. Whatever the truth, what seems certain is that the object was voluntarily hidden, thus it was recovered intact. In this period, between the
Late Antiquity and the Early
Middle Ages, the plateau and its surroundings were affected by the allocation of people of Germanic origin. Several place names, including the Campigoti (literally, lands of the
Goths) are proof of this. The agricultural exploitation of some localities located on the edge of the road layout is to be ascribed to this time, as in the case of the hamlets of Rugna and Ronche (from the late Latin
runcare: to till the soil, deforest). == Introduction of bean cultivation ==