The town was founded in the place of a 10th-century fort and a craftsmen settlement outside the fort, which was located near a convenient crossing of the Ilanka river. It was located in Lubusz Land, which was part of the provinces of
Greater Poland and
Silesia of the Medieval
Kingdom of Poland. In the second half of the 13th century the land was handed over by
archbishops of
Magdeburg to
Brandenburg margraves. Rzepin's history become turbulent ever since. The town was sold many times and its land was regularly confiscated. The oldest record about Rzepin dates back to 1297 and it regards the presence of pleban de Repin (Repin's parson) Iacobus Craft at a ceremony of granting the village of Wystok to the
Paradyż Abbey. In 14th and 15th century the town was defined with a ‘New’ suffix, which could signify its new location or new town charter: 28 July 1329 – Newen Reppin, 1335 – Nyen Rypin, 1441 – Nyen Reppen. The grad was possibly transferred into a more convenient place because the remains of an earlier grad upon the Ilanka river, between Tarnawa Rzepińska and
Starościn, survived until our times. The names Reppin or Reppen appear in the
German literature, while Rypin or Rzepin can be found in the Polish sources. In 1437 the name Stat Kleynen Reppin appeared once more, however an attempt to call the town ‘little’ was unsuccessful. Since the mid-15th century, its name was written without the adjective. Medieval Rzepin was a town inhabited by craftsmen. There were guilds of clothiers, butchers, bakers and shoemakers. Its citizens were also earning their living as fishermen and brewers. A water mill was a part of the town landscape. Thanks to the citizens’ resourcefulness and valor the town was developing rapidly, however, it was hindered by plagues and other disasters, including numerous fires. One of them destroyed a historical town hall. Between 1373 and 1415 the town was part of the
Lands of the Bohemian (Czech) Crown. From the 18th century the town was part of the
Kingdom of Prussia, and from 1871 it was part of the
German Empire. New railway lines were built passing through the town, connecting
Frankfurt (Oder) with
Poznań (1869) and
Szczecin with
Głogów (1875), and a railway line connecting Rzepin with
Ośno Lubuskie,
Sulęcin and
Międzyrzecz (1890). In 1881, a Richter Fund Hospital was built (the building in Słubicka Street doesn't exist any more). From 1975 until 1998 the town administratively belonged to the
Gorzów Voivodeship. ==Urban planning==