| Surname | Stam |
| Type | Topographic or Figurative |
| Meaning | Tree trunk, stem — the foundation |
| Frequency | ~8,000 in Netherlands |
| Hotspot | South Holland, Utrecht, Zeeland |
From the Middle Dutch stam — trunk of a tree, stem, or family lineage. A topographic surname for someone living near a prominent tree stump or trunk, or a figurative name suggesting the founding trunk of a family line
Stam is a compact, resonant Dutch surname with the sense of rootedness and foundation. The stam is the trunk — what everything else grows from. As a surname, it likely began as a topographic name for a family living near a distinctive old tree or prominent stump. Over time, its figurative meaning of lineage and ancestry gave it additional depth.
The surname concentrates in the coastal provinces of South Holland and Zeeland, with spread into Utrecht. It may also have originated as a nickname for someone considered the progenitor of a local family — the founding trunk of the line. The name was formalized during the Napoleonic surname registration in the early nineteenth century.
Stam families appear in Dutch-South African genealogies and in North American Dutch-heritage communities. The name is found in Michigan and Iowa Dutch communities and in the Reformed Church diaspora networks that spread from the Netherlands through the nineteenth century.
Researching Stam ancestry? The Netherlands national archives at Nationaal Archief (nationaalarchief.nl) and Genlias hold civil registration records from 1811 onward. The Dutch-South African genealogy archives are held by GSSA in Pretoria. FamilySearch has digitised many Dutch Reformed church records.
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