The name of Collingham is first attested in 1166, with spellings including the present one alongside
Collyngham. The name comes from
Old English. The first element is the
personal name Cola (which originated as a nickname deriving from Old English
col 'coal', referring to black hair or dark complexion), and the second the suffix
-ingas denoting a group of associated people. Thus the
Colingas were a group descended from or otherwise associated with someone called Cola. This group name was then compounded with the Old English word
hām ('settlement, homestead'). Thus the name once meant 'the settlement of the descendants of Cola'. The parish and township of Collingham also once included the village of Compton, whose name is first attested in the
Domesday Book of 1086, as
Contone. This name comes from the Old English words
cumb ('valley') and
tūn ('estate, farmstead'), and thus once meant 'farmstead of the valley'. ==Transport==