Stanisław Staszic (born Nov. 6, 1755, Schneidemühl, Prussia [now Piła, Pol.]—died Jan. 20, 1826, Warsaw) was the foremost political writer of the Enlightenment in Poland.
Staszic came from a middle-class family. He studied at Leipzig, Göttingen, and Paris and was far more European in his outlook than many of his Polish contemporaries.
He became a teacher and then began to write on social and political subjects. Later, he worked as a geologist, prospecting for minerals and reorganizing the coal mines of the Dąrowa district and the ore mines in the Olkusz area. Also interested in agriculture, he advocated improvements in crops and cultivation techniques, and in 1824 he divided his estate among his peasants, turning it into a cooperative.
In his most important work, Przestrogi dla Polski (1790; “Warning to Poland”), he drew a grim picture of the country’s social and economic depredation by the gentry and advocated democratic reform. His other works include Ród ludzki (1819–20; “The Human Condition”), a long philosophic poem, and a translation into Polish of Homer’s Iliad.