Stadhampton is a village and civil parish about 7 miles (11 km) southeast of Oxford in South Oxfordshire, England.
[2] Stadham has also been used, including colloquially to the present day, and the "ton" suffix seems to have been added relatively late in the village's history.
[3] The Domesday Book of 1086 does not mention Stadhampton by name, but the settlement evidently formed part of the demesne lands of the Bishop of Lincoln's Dorchester manor.
[2] The parish is about 10 miles (16 km) south-east of Oxford and includes the villages of Stadhampton and Chiselhampton and hamlets of Ascott and Brookhampton.
[citation needed] On the main street is a 17th-century bakehouse, thatched and built of coursed stone and bearing the date 1658, that was used as a bakery until about 1914.
[9] Thomas repaired the turret clock at St Peter's parish church, Great Haseley on several occasions between 1770 and 1790.
The parish has three pub-restaurants: The Coach & Horses Inn[13] in Chiselhampton and The Crown[14] and the Crazy Bear Hotel[15] in Stadhampton.
[16] Thames Travel bus route T1 serves Stadhampton six days a week, linking the village with Oxford via Garsington and Cowley and with Watlington via Chalgrove.