## Defenestrate
To defenestrate is to throw someone or something out of a window. The word is unusual in English for a reason that goes beyond its memorable sound: its origin can be traced to a specific date, a specific building, and a specific act of political violence.
## Etymology
The core of the word is Latin *fenestra*, meaning "window." The prefix *de-* in Latin indicates removal or separation — *de fenestra*, away from the window. The ultimate origin of *fenestra* is itself disputed. It may derive from an Etruscan substrate word, or from some other pre-Indo-European language spoken in the Italian peninsula before Latin spread to dominate it. The form has no clear cognates in the Indo-European family, which makes
The noun *defenestratio* was coined in New Latin — the scholarly Latin of early modern Europe — specifically to name a political event that had already happened. The verb *defenestrate* is a back-formation from this noun: the noun came first, the verb was derived from it later by stripping the abstract suffix and treating it as if there had always been a Latin verb *defenestrare*. This reverse-engineering of a verb from a noun is common in English (the verb *edit* came from *editor*, *laze* from *lazy*), but it is rarer for a word to carry such a precise historical pedigree.
## The Defenestrations of Prague
The word exists because Prague, twice within two centuries, resolved its political crises by throwing people out of windows.
### The First Defenestration (1419)
In July 1419, a crowd of Hussite reformers — followers of the martyred theologian Jan Hus — marched on the New Town Hall in Prague. When the city councillors inside refused to release Hussite prisoners, the crowd stormed the building and threw several Catholic councillors from the upper windows onto the street below. The councillors did not survive. The event ignited the Hussite Wars, a prolonged conflict that drew in much of central Europe and prefigured the broader
### The Second Defenestration (1618)
This is the event for which the word was coined. On 23 May 1618, a group of Protestant Bohemian nobles confronted two Catholic Imperial governors — Jaroslav Bořita of Martinice and Vilém Slavata of Chlum — along with their secretary Philipp Fabricius, in a chamber of Prague Castle. After a summary "trial," all three men were thrown from the window, falling some fifteen to eighteen metres.
The Catholic account attributed their survival to divine intervention — angels, it was said, had borne them safely down. The Protestant account was more earthly: the men landed in a pile of horse manure in the moat below, which broke their fall. Fabricius allegedly fled the scene and reported the news to the Emperor, earning himself the sardonic nickname *von Hohenfall* — "of the high fall." The event is the conventional starting point of the Thirty Years' War
The noun *defenestration* entered English in the seventeenth century, carried by scholarly and diplomatic writing about Bohemian affairs. It remained a specialist historical term for a long time — the kind of word you would find in accounts of central European politics rather than in general conversation.
Over time, the word escaped its historical context. Its length and formality make it faintly absurd when applied to small objects, which is exactly why it has been adopted into casual and humorous usage. "I wanted to defenestrate my printer" is funny in a way that "I wanted to throw my printer out of the window" is not, because the word carries the weight of imperial governors and holy wars and lands it on a malfunctioning piece of office equipment.
## Technical Culture
In computing communities, *defenestration* acquired a second layer of meaning: the act of removing or switching away from Microsoft Windows as an operating system. The joke depends on the double meaning of "windows" and is old enough to have circulated on Usenet before it became a common internet-era quip. It remains in use among Linux and macOS advocates as a slightly arch way of describing a platform migration.
## A Word for a Specific Moment
Most words develop slowly, accreting meaning across generations and geographies. *Defenestrate* is different. It was created to describe something that had already happened — a noun invented for a catastrophe, and a verb extracted from that noun. The two men who survived the fall in 1618 and the secretary who ran to tell the Emperor are among the few historical figures whose misfortune gave a word to a language. The horse manure that caught them is, in its way, part