Ladomirová (Hungarian: Ladomérvágása; Rusyn: Ладомирова) is a village and municipality in Svidník District in the Prešov Region of north-eastern Slovakia.
In the medieval Kingdom of Hungary, from the local fortress, which was later transformed into a manor house, the castellans administered the eastern part of the Makovica castle estate.
In the second half of the 14th century, the Cudar family, the owners of Makovice, intensified the colonization of their manor even after 1364, also on the basis of modified German law.
In the years 1415–1416, the property auction of the territory and seat of the Makovice estate was confirmed by the donation of King Sigismund and the Jáger Chapter.
The commercial frequency of the country road is also evidenced by a newer find of a vessel with about five golden ducats of Hungarian king Matthias Corvinus (one piece is in the collection of the Museum of Ukrainian and Ruthenian Culture in Svidník under accession number 11/78).
The historical development in the village and the construction of peasant dwellings were built next to the road and it can be typologically classified that it has the character of an irregular distribution of individual houses.
Until the beginning of the Second World War, there were only log houses in the village with a barn and a shovel under a common high hipped thatched roof.
At the beginning of the 20th century, linen weaving, carriage knitting, and the production of woodworking tools were widespread in the village.