Capo di Ponte
Italy · Europe
About Capo di Ponte
Capo di Ponte is the cultural heart of in Val Camonica, a wide Alpine valley in Lombardy, northern Italy. This small, quiet town is one of Europe’s most extraordinary prehistoric sites: it sits at the centre of the Val Camonica Rock Art, a vast collection of over 140,000 petroglyphs carved into sandstone over thousands of years. These carvings—depicting hunters, warriors, animals, farming scenes, ritual symbols, and even early maps—span from the Mesolithic period through the Iron Age and into Roman times.
Capo di Ponte travel guide
Understand
The people of Val Camonica, known as the Camunni, left behind an unparalleled visual record of their world. Unlike painted cave art elsewhere in Europe, these figures were hammered and scratched into exposed rock surfaces, meaning they are best viewed in natural light—often at certain angles where shadows bring the carvings to life. The engravings show a transition from hunter-gatherer societies to more complex agricultural and warrior cultures. You’ll see stylised deer, duelling figures, ploughing scenes, solar symbols, and mysterious geometric shapes. Some panels appear almost like proto-maps, especially at Bedolina, hinting at early spatial awareness and land organisation.
Getting there
Capo di Ponte lies about 100 km northeast of Brescia.
By train Regional trains run up the valley from Brescia (line to Edolo).
By car Follow the SS42 road through Val Camonica.
By plane The nearest airports are in Milan (Linate, Malpensa) and Bergamo (Orio al Serio).
See
1 Parco Nazionale delle Incisioni Rupestri di Naquane, [email protected]. The flagship site and best introduction to Val Camonica’s rock art. Well-marked walking paths wind through woodland past dozens of engraved rock panels. Look for iconic scenes of warriors with shields, hunting sequences, and animals. Interpretation panels help decode the imagery. (updated Jun 2026) 2 Parco Archeologico Nazionale dei Massi di Cemmo. Two enormous carved boulders, among the earliest discovered in the valley. These monumental stones suggest ritual or ceremonial importance and provide insight into the oldest phases of engraving activity. (updated Jun 2026) 3 Parco Archeologico Comunale di Seradina-Bedolina. More rugged and less crowded, this park rewards those willing to hike. The highlight is the famous “Bedolina Map”, an intricate composition believed to represent fields, paths, and settlements—possibly one of the oldest topographic maps in the world. (updated Jun 2026) 4 Museo Nazionale della Preistoria della Valle Camonica, [email protected]. A compact but excellent museum in Capo di Ponte that provides context before or after visiting the sites. Displays include casts of engravings, artefacts, and explanations of carving techniques and chronology. (updated Jun 2026)
Overview adapted from Wikipedia, travel guide fromWikivoyage (CC BY-SA)。Photography via Wikimedia Commons.