Calalzo di Cadore
Calalzo di Cadore is a municipality of 2,400 inhabitants of the province of Belluno, in the Italian region of Veneto. The name Calalzo derives from the Latin altus callis, meaning "high place." The geographical name "di Cadore" was added by Presidential Decree on 30 June 1959.
History
Calalzo, known as "Calaucio" in an ancient parchment, was part of the Hundred of Pieve di Cadore, seat of the Magnifica Comunità di Cadore. Its history and economy are closely linked to the fortunes of this territory.Administrative documents in the municipal archive also show contracts for use of lands owned by other municipalities even far from neighboring territories. For example, the purchase of forests and pastures in Ajarnola and Selvapiana in the municipality of Comelico Superiore. Since 1420, with the annexation of Cadore to Venice, the timber trade, through floating, was the main industry of the Cadore villages. With the fall of the Republic of Venice in 1797 and the dominion of France first, Austria later, also due to competition from countries within the Austro-Hungarian Empire, this activity underwent a decline that continued even after the annexation of Cadore to the Kingdom of Italy. Then began the phenomenon of emigration in Cadore.
There was, however, an event that would revolutionize the economy of this land over time when the eyewear industry began in Calalzo in 1877 by the brothers Angelo and Leone Frescura and Giovanni Lozza, natives of the hamlet of Rizzios. Calalzo di Cadore was also the birthplace of the novelist Pacifico Fiori, born in the municipality in 1898.
In the municipal library Enrico De Lotto, Inaugurated in 1986 in the presence of Mario Rigoni Stern, equipped with 20,000 volumes, parchment containing arbitrations, purchases, transactions, and awards dating back to the fourteenth century are preserved, along with other valuable documents. Two precious donations have found hospitality there: the entire library belonging to Enrico Pappacena, a professor of history of religions at the University of Bari, and numerous works, manuscripts, and documents of illustrious Calalzo residents.