The village stretches around
Ham Hill which is a geological
Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI),
Iron Age hillfort,
Roman site and
country park. The hill has given its name to the distinctive quarried
hamstone which is quarried from a ridge of sandy
limestone rock that is elevated above the lower lying
clay vales and nearby
Somerset Levels. It is of particular importance to geologists because of the assemblages of fossils which it contains, the sedimentary features which it displays and the way it relates to other rocks of equivalent age in the close vicinity. The
Bronze Age and Iron Age hillfort was occupied by the
Durotriges tribe. A Roman milestone was found at Venn Bridge in 1930: apparently it was made as an element in a colonnade and afterwards converted to a milestone inscribed with the name of the emperor
Flavius Severus who ruled in 305–306 CE. In the 10th century the estate passed to
Glastonbury Abbey, but after the
Norman Conquest was held by
Robert, Count of Mortain and granted to Robert "the Constable" FitzIvo. It then passed down through the
Beauchamps of Hatch, becoming known as Stoke Beauchamp. It was acquired by the
Duchy of Cornwall in 1443 and is still held by the Duchy. The parish of Stoke was part of
Tintinhull Hundred. The village is the site of the 14th-century
Stoke sub Hamdon Priory which is a former priests' house of the chantry chapel of St Nicholas, which was destroyed after the
dissolution of the monasteries. The priory has been owned by the
National Trust since 1946, and designated by
English Heritage as a Grade I
listed building. ==Governance==