Banister (pronounced ban-uh-ster)
(1) The
handrail on the side of a staircase.
(2) One
of the vertical supports of a handrail; a baluster (often in the plural as banisters).
(3) The
balustrade of a staircase (usually in the plural as banisters).
(4) To construct
a banister.
(5) To
act as a banister (only in the literal sense).
1660–1670: Of uncertain origin but thought most likely by dissimilation from the earlier ballester & the seventeenth century barrester, both corruptions of baluster. As late a 1848 it was listed as “a vulgar term” but by the early twentieth century was an accepted part of the language of architecture and in the building trades. The surname Bannister was unrelated to the use in architecture and entered English from the Anglo-Norman Bannister, from the Old French banastre (basket); it was thus occupational and described a “basket-maker”. Like many surnames, it also became a locality name. The verb use in the sense of “to construct a banister” is a metal worker’s or carpenter’s term to describe “fabricating a banister” while the idea of “to act as a banister” is an allusion to some use of static uprights to support something. There’s is no evidence it has been used figuratively in the way “pillar” or “buttress” are used metaphorically. Minnie Bannister (voiced by Spike Milligan (1918–2002) & Henry Crun (voiced by Peter Sellers (1925–1980)) were two elderly characters in the BBC’s radio comedy series The Goon Show (1951-1960) which was, by the standards of the time, somewhat anarchic and a precursor to later ventures into surrealist television like Monty Python's Flying Circus (1969-1974). The gags involving Henry Crun & “Modern Min” Bannister usually involved placing the two into roles wholly improbably for such a decrepit pair. The spelling bannister (influenced presumably by the surname Bannister) is listed by most dictionaries as an alternative but it seems rare. Banister is a noun & verb and banistering & banistered are verbs; the noun plural is banisters.
Baluster (pronounced bal-uh-ster)
(1) In
architecture, any of a number of closely spaced uprights supporting a railing.
(2) Any
of various symmetrical supports, as furniture legs or spindles, tending to
swell toward the bottom or top (rare in US use).
1595–1605:
From the French baluster, from the Middle
French balustre, from the Italian balaustro (pillar shaped like the calyx
of the pomegranate flower), from balausta
(wild pomegranate flower), ultimately from the Latin balaustium, from the Ancient Greek βαλαύστιον (balaústion), probably from a Semitic language. Iin Aramaic (the language of Christ), a balatz was “a wild pomegranate flower”
and in Classical Syriac ܒܠܳܨܳܐ (blāṣā) was “a pomegranate shoot”. In Roman architecture, uprights with lyre-like
double curves (resembling the swelling form of the half-opened pomegranate
flower) were most fashionable. The
spellings ballister & balluster are both (obsolete) while balustre
is listed as an alternative (though not used in the US). Baluster is a noun and balustered &
balusterlike are adjectives; the noun plural is balusters.
Balustrade (pronounced bal-uh-streyd)
A
railing with supporting balusters.
1635-1645:
An unadapted borrowing from the French balustrade, from the Middle French balustre, from the Italian balaustro (pillar shaped like the calyx
of the pomegranate flower), from balausta
(wild pomegranate flower). Balustrade is
a noun and balustraded & balustrading are verbs; the noun plural is plural
balustrades.
Of
staircases and such
The terms “banister”, “baluster” & “balustrade”
are all used in the language of architecture and design, usually in the context
of staircases or railing systems but all refer to different elements. Banister is now used more loosely than in
earlier times. Mostly, banister refers
to the handrail of a staircase, the part one is supposed to hold to stabilize
one’s self when ascending or descending (or slide down if one is a child or
drunken under-graduate) but it’s also sometimes use of the uprights attached to
the rail. Banister and “handrail” can
thus be interchangeable but the former is almost universal in the US while in
other parts of the English-speaking world (even Canada, usually a part of the
US sphere of linguistic influence), handrail has become common. Interestingly, one piece of global linguistic
standardization seems to be the WH&S (workplace health & safety)
signage: It’s always something like “use the handrail when using stairs”, never “use the banister”.
Joe Biden (b 1942; US president since 2021) tripping up (for the second time that assent) while climbing the stairs of Air Force One (despite following the WH&S warning and gripping the handrail). Since the motor manifestations of his descent into senility have become more obvious, Mr Biden is no longer allowed to use the “big stairs” and is directed to the “baby stairs” in the plane’s nose. Whether the small, angled brackets (some might call them flanges) which affix the handrail to the structure can be called balusters is debatable but that’s certainly their function.
“Baluster” is the correct technical term for the uprights (the vertical posts or spindles supporting the handrail (a few of which are actually decorative with no structural function). Whether decorative or structural, balusters are almost always arrayed in a series, either a cluster of identical units or with some variations as an architectural flourish. In style, balusters can simple or ornate and constructed from just about any materials including wood, metal, stone or composites. In some cases, balusters and banisters (handrails) will be of the same material and in others they will differ. Some materials have fallen from favor because of the maintenance factor. Brass was once widely used but keeping it polished proved a labor intensive business and in the hotels which once dripped with the stuff, there's now much more aluminium and stainless steel visible.
She would blame the (missing) balustrades because there is always someone or something to blame: Crooked Hillary Clinton, slipping (twice) in India, March 2018.
Although
often much admired for their intricacy, banisters, balustrades and such are an
important safety feature of staircases.
In March 2018, while visiting (for some reason) the Jahaj Maha (Ship Palace)
in Mandu, crooked Hillary Clinton (b 1947; US secretary of state 2009-2013),
despite holding the arm of an aide, slipped while descending stone stairs. Another aide quickly took the other arm to
stabilize things and the descent resumed but she slipped again, illustrating
the importance of handrails which weren’t so much of a thing in the sixteenth
century when the palace was built.
Crooked Hillary might be used (at least when not slipping) as an example
of the way Spaniards explain the meaning of the word “enigma”: “Were one to meet
her on the stairs, one couldn’t be sure if she was going up, or coming down”.
To an architect, a “balustrade” is the name for the whole apparatus (the handrail (banister) and the balusters assembled), added to which might be as base-rail below (although some balusters are mounted directly to the floor or the tread of the stairs. So, the balustrade is the collective term for the whole railing system on a staircase, balcony, terrace, walkway, or other structure but a convention (by no means universal) seems to have evolved to use balustrade to describe structures other than those used on staircases (unless they’re outdoors). A railing separating pedestrians from road traffic or a river would certainly be a balustrade and that might also be the term of choice for the apparatus on the staircase leading from the river. Once inside however, it’s all banisters and handrails.
"Glass balustrades" are a favorite of interior decorators and can be applied to both indoor and outdoor use. In domestic use, there's sometimes some resistance because many people, understandably, associate glass with fragility but the glass used is a specialized tempered safety glass, rated at some 400% the strength of that typically used in windows. An additional benefit is that other than cleaning, glass is an essentially zero-maintenance material and not susceptible to rot, rust or other forms of corrosion. Depending on the desired effect, a hybrid approach can also be used in which there's a traditional banister (handrail) and base-rail with a small number of uprights (balusters), a glass panel taking the place of the rest. This is essentially using the components as a window frame.
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