1618 Defenestration Of Prague: Two Catholic Lords, Secretary Survive 70-Ft. Fall

By | May 21, 2020

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The Defenestration of Prague depicted by Johann Philipp Abelinus between 1635 and 1662. (Wikimedia Commons)

On May 23, 1618, a divine miracle took place in Prague. That, or three guys just caught a lucky—albeit stinky—break. What began as a political protest ended with the spark that triggered the Thirty Years' War, perhaps the only war in history to start with people getting thrown out a window.

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"Defenestration" literally means "the act of throwing someone out of a window." (crossroadshistoricalresearch.com)

First, A Vocabulary Lesson

"Defenestration" is probably not a word that is in your everyday vernacular. This term, translated from Latin, literally means the act of throwing something, most often a person, out of a window. It's an oddly specific word that, not surprisingly, entered the language right around 1618, conveniently in time to name the May 23 event.