Soon the streets of the village were bustling with foreigners, who spoke foreign languages, wore different styled clothes, and all, without exception, landed up at the Nave d’Oro. The small hotel was transformed into one of the most illustrious salons of the time. From the royal chamberlain of Prussia, Alexander von Humboldt (1769-1859), the well-known geographer and naturalist, to Ferdinand von Richthofen (1833-1905), the tireless German scholar and traveller; from the famous French naturalist and geologist Déodat de Dolomieu, whom these mountains are named after, to Maria Mathilda Ogilvie Gordon (1864-1939), an English geologist, botanist and zoologist, who with great passion devoted a good part of her life to studying these mountains and was the first woman to receive the title of Doctor of Science. All of them were investigating the exciting history of the Dolomites, trapped in the crystal lattice of the pale rocks, and all, without exception, were renowned guests of the Nave d'Oro.