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Back to EpisodesWhy Prague threw its leaders out windows
Description
Imagine the sheer terror of standing in the grand meeting room of a castle when an angry mob corners you, drags you to an open window, and shoves you out. You are now plunging 70 feet straight down toward a rocky moat. While this sounds like an over-the-top action movie scene, it was actually a highly methodical political strategy in Bohemia. The English language has a hyper-specific word just for this act—defenestration—derived from the Latin fenestra (window). Far from a punchline, this brutal tradition repeatedly served as a very loud, public statement of mob justice, launching catastrophic holy wars and permanently reshaping the map of Europe.
The reason the word entered modern vocabulary is entirely due to a series of events in Prague, stretching from the late medieval era to the dawn of the Cold War. In 1419, the First Defenestration of Prague saw an angry mob of Hussites—a proto-Protestant Christian movement following the executed reformer Jan Hus—storm the New Town Hall and hurl the judge and senior council members out the windows, sparking the devastating Hussite Wars. This established a dark precedent in the Bohemian psyche: throwing leaders out of windows was a declaration of total structural rebellion. The act became such a potent narrative tool that political actors spent centuries weaponizing the stories of who survived the drops, turning gravity into propaganda.
- The First Blueprint and Stone Spark (1419): How a localized Hussite protest over prisoners erupted into a continental war when someone inside the New Town Hall threw a stone that struck a proto-Protestant priest, prompting the crowd to storm the building, target senior officials, and trigger a papal crusade.
- The Social Equality Coup Paradox (1483): A swift preemptive coup by a Hussite faction demanding social and spiritual equality through communion under both kinds (bread and wine for all); the mob murdered town counselors inside the building before performatively tossing their corpses out the windows to visually desecrate their authority.
- The 70-Foot Tectonic Shift (1618): The most famous defenestration, where a Protestant assembly cornered Catholic hardliners at Prague Castle who violated the guaranteed religious protections of the Letter of Majesty, throwing two counts and their secretary out a window to ignite the catastrophic Thirty Years' War.
- The Miraculous vs. Retroactive Dung Propaganda: The fierce 17th-century public relations battle over how the 1618 victims survived the 70-foot drop; Catholics proclaimed a literal miracle involving angels, while Protestants retroactively manufactured "fake news" pamphlets claiming the men simply landed in a giant pile of manure.
- The Baron of Highfall and Cold War Echoes: The bizarre historical irony of secretary Philip Fabricius being ennobled by the Emperor as "Baron von Hohenfall" (Baron of Highfall) for surviving his launch, a method of political assassination that echoed into 1948 when democratic Foreign Minister Jan Masaryk was found dead beneath a Prague window.
Source credit: Research for this episode included transcript materials and supporting historical sources accessed 6/10/2026. Content is summarized and adapted for commentary and educational use.