The territories of the present Sztabin Commune were once inhabited by the
Yotvingians. In 1506, King
Alexander Jagiellon gave a part of this land to the Chreptowicz family. The village was founded by Adam Chreptowicz before 1598, at the river crossing, on the route from
Augustów to
Knyszyn. At the beginning of its existence, it was called Osinki for over a century and a half. In 1627, a Uniate church was built here from the Adam Chreptowicz foundation, which stood in the place of the Orthodox chapel founded in 1513 by Teodor Chreptowicz. Around 1656, the church was converted into a Roman Catholic church. The name Sztabin was introduced in 1760 by Joachim Chreptowicz, Chancellor of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. He marked out a triangular market and a network of streets. The settlement became the main shopping center of Krasnoborski estates (Chreptowicz, and later Brzostowski). At the end of the 17th century, it began to transform into an urban center. In 1766 Sztabin obtained the royal privilege for fairs and fairs. The town is known mainly for the social and economic experiments of Count Karol Brzostowski. In the 1820s he founded the so-called the Republic of Sztabin. He freed the peasants from serfdom, set up a school and introduced compulsory free education in his estates, modernized agriculture (introduced crop rotation and new tools), built a hospital to which he brought a doctor, introduced a penal code, founded a savings and loan fund. He built a glassworks, a brickyard, a sawmill, and a cast iron factory (he built a turf ore remelting furnace), bringing the declining estate to flourish. Thanks to him, a parish was established in 1895, and a marina at Biebrza was built. After his death (1854) he gave his property to peasants in a perpetual lease, but the Russian authorities annulled his will. Sztabin slowly lost its importance and in 1897 he was deprived of town rights. Sztabin's population took an active part in the national liberation struggles. During the
January Uprising, a branch of colonel Konstanty Ramotowski "Wawr" operated in the area, whose camp at the Goat Market in the
Augustów Forest was the site of one of the major battles in this region. According to the
1921 Polish Census, Sztabin was inhabited by 500 people, among whom 437 were Roman Catholic, 62 Jewish, and one Orthodox. At the same time, all residents declared Polish nationality. There were 83 residential buildings in the village. Following the German-Soviet
invasion of Poland, which started
World War II in September 1939, the village was initially
occupied by the
Soviet Union until 1941, and then by Germany until 1944. Afterwards, it was restored to Poland, although with a Soviet-installed communist regime, which stayed in power until the
Fall of Communism in the 1980s. The
Polish anti-communist resistance was active in Sztabin, and in 1945 it raided a local communist police station. ==References==