Municipal office of Stáblovice.
Stáblovice was founded under the Olomouc bishop Bruno of Schaunberg between the years 1245 - 1281. The old origin of the village is evidenced by the original layout of the cottages in the shape of a horseshoe, when the front part of the village was the lord's residence and the side were the peasant and horticultural estates of the subjects. The village is apparently named after the founder, Mr. Stabul.
The first written mention is from 1389, when the village was a fief of the Olomouc bishopric. The first listed holders of Štáblovice were the bishops Mikuláš and Bruno from Štáblovice (probably sons or grandsons of the founder), they lived in 1320 - 1360.
The holders of the Štáblovice fief, the lords, took turns relatively quickly, residing at the fortress in the village. One of the most important was Kašpar Rotrmberk from Ketř, who bequeathed the Štáblovice fief in 1558 and had the fortress rebuilt into a smaller Renaissance castle, a century later under Jan Lescourant it was rebuilt in the Baroque style and acquired its current form under the Sobki from Kornice, who became holders fief in l759 and remained so until modern times.
Stáblovice was probably already a rectory in the 16th century, and the wooden church was a branch of the central church in Jaktař. however, during the Thirty Years' War, the rectory disappeared.