Tropedia

  • Before making a single edit, Tropedia EXPECTS our site policy and manual of style to be followed. Failure to do so may result in deletion of contributions and blocks of users who refuse to learn to do so. Our policies can be reviewed here.
  • All images MUST now have proper attribution, those who neglect to assign at least the "fair use" licensing to an image may have it deleted. All new pages should use the preloadable templates feature on the edit page to add the appropriate basic page markup. Pages that don't do this will be subject to deletion, with or without explanation.
  • All new trope pages will be made with the "Trope Workshop" found on the "Troper Tools" menu and worked on until they have at least three examples. The Trope workshop specific templates can then be removed and it will be regarded as a regular trope page after being moved to the Main namespace. THIS SHOULD BE WORKING NOW, REPORT ANY ISSUES TO Janna2000, SelfCloak or RRabbit42. DON'T MAKE PAGES MANUALLY UNLESS A TEMPLATE IS BROKEN, AND REPORT IT THAT IS THE CASE. PAGES WILL BE DELETED OTHERWISE IF THEY ARE MISSING BASIC MARKUP.

READ MORE

Tropedia
Advertisement
WikEd fancyquotesQuotesBug-silkHeadscratchersIcons-mini-icon extensionPlaying WithUseful NotesMagnifierAnalysisPhoto linkImage LinksHaiku-wide-iconHaikuLaconic
File:Regstick copy 283.jpg
Cquote1

Captain Blackadder: "Don't forget your stick Lieutenant!"

Lieutenant George: "Rather, sir. Wouldn't want to face a machine gun without this."
Cquote2


A Staff of Authority, also know as a staff of office, is a staff or rod which often denotes an official's position, a social rank or a degree of social prestige. Staffs, scepters, batons, swagger sticks, pace sticks, riding crops (when used like a swagger stick instead of for riding), ceremonial maces, and crosiers are all but a few examples. Canes would also sometimes qualify if they are used to indicate a specific office or profession.

Long staffs are often associated with old age, because of their original use as walking stick. Such staffs are frequently found in hands of those whose office is associated with intelligence, maturity, wisdom, experience, and careful consideration.

Alternatively, certain types of staffs, such as swagger sticks, regimental sticks and pace sticks, are associated with military authority, physical strength and and aggressive leadership, in large part because such sticks were once used (and in some armies still are) to inflict corporal punishment on subordinates. A swagger stick might be part of making a character looks like a Four-Star Badass, Colonel Badass or Drill Sergeant Nasty.

If the trope is being subverted, a rod or swagger stick might be placed in the hands of a Miles Gloriosus or The Neidermeyer.

This trope is Truth in Television and Older Than Dirt. See also The Other Wiki for more information on Real Life staffs of office, swagger sticks, pace sticks, batons, scepters, ceremonial maces, and croziers

A Magic Staff sometimes doubles as a Staff of Authority. Staffs used mainly for combat purposes that are not intended as a mark of authority would be a Simple Staff. Maces designed for fighting rather than display could fall under Carry a Big Stick. However, there can be overlap in these tropes. A staff, rod or mace can have magical or fighting uses and still be a Staff of Authority, but only if it is also a symbol of authority, rank or position. A Staff of Authority in the hands of royalty would also be a part of Requisite Royal Regalia.

Examples of Staff of Authority include:


Comic Books[]

  • Tintin tale King Ottokar's Scepter - The new King of Syldavia will be forced to abdicate if he can't find the titular object before the people notices it was stolen. It's all a front for an attempted Anschluss.

Film[]

  • The Dark Crystal - The Skesis emperor carries a scepter which designates his office. In the death scene of the first emperor, Chamberlain indicates his eagerness to take over by reaching for the scepter.
  • The D.I. - Jack Webb's character, a US Marine Corps Drill Instructor almost constantly carries a swagger stick.
  • Journey to the Center of the Earth: in the 1959 film a baton/mace is used by the leader of the military music unit.
  • Patton - General Patton is portrayed frequently carrying a riding crop, indicating both his status as an officer with something of a flair for the dramatic, and his background in the cavalry. This is Truth in Television, though something the movie doesn't mention is that there was also a long dagger concealed in the riding crop, similar to a Sword Cane.
  • Star Trek III: The Search For Spock - Captain Styles of the USS Excelsior is often seen carrying a swagger stick.
  • Star War Episode III: Revenge of the Sith - Tion Medon, Port Administrator of Pau City, carries an ornate staff of office.
  • The Bridge on the River Kwai - Colonel Nicholson (Alec Guiness) is shown carrying a swagger stick in the early scene in the movie when he informs the Japanese commandant that according to the Geneva Conventions, officers cannot be required to perform manual labor. Colonel Saito snaps the stick in half in a fury, while informing him that he is not in command. After the scene where Colonel Saito gives the Colonel permission to assume command of the prisoners and get the bridge built his way, the stick reappears. After the bridge is completed, he drops it in the river while talking to Colonel Saito.
  • Binghamton in the McHales Navy film carries one in an attempt to look more competent than he actually he is. He ends up hurting himself when he whips it under his armpit too fast.

Literature[]

  • In Dan Abnett's Gaunt's Ghosts novel Necropolis, the Master Legislator uses his golden specter as a staff. This is also a sign that the vote on Sturm's tactics (which Gaunt and other generals have been shut off from comment on) is binding despite the excellent reasons offered against the plan after the vote.
    • Much later on, in The Armour Of Contempt, the story opens with Drill Sergeant Kexie laying down the law with his stick; a cross between a swagger stick and an officer's baton. He calls it Saroo.
  • In Dan Abnett's Warhammer 40000 novel Brothers of the Snake, the coronation regalia include a spectre and orb. They are supposed to react if the heir is improper, and they don't. More importantly, they are the sealants for the Sealed Evil in a Can; the queen had been assassinated precisely so they would be removed from the Royal Mound. Weather Dissonance soon shows up, and an Inquisitor and a squad of Space Marines must move to contain it.
  • JRR Tolkien - The poem Mythopoeia uses the symbol of a golden scepter to represent the creative human author ruling his own subcreation.
  • Lord of the Rings
    • The Istari, including Saruman and Gandalf have staffs that seem to be symbolic as well as practical. In their confrontation at Isengard after the Ents march on the place, Gandalf breaks Saruman's staff to show that his authority has been revoked by the Powers That Be.
    • The Sceptre of Annúminas was the chief mark of royalty of the North-kingdom of Arnor in Eriador in Middle-earth during the Third Age
    • The Stewards of Gondor are (in theory) the deputies of the kings, and have their own cool stick - a white staff that is their symbol of authority. Just before his suicide, Denethor breaks it in because he believes the kingdom is doomed.
  • In Starship Troopers (the novel), the Drill Sergeants of the Mobile Infantry carry swagger sticks they use to hit the recruits to get them moving. It was felt more dignified to use them then to lay hands on the recruit.
  • In the Liaden Universe novel Fledgling, each department chair at the University of Delgado has a staff of office. At least one of them has a concealed sword built into it.
  • Rachel Swirsky's story A Memory of Wind refers to King Agamemnon as holding a staff of office while presiding over the council as which he decides to sacrifice his daughter, and uses the weight of the staff to symbolize the weight of his burdens.
  • The Scarlet Letter The town beadle carries a staff of office.
  • Lords of Discipline - Cadet First Sergeant Maccabbee, of the Carolina Military Institute (A Bland-Name Product rip of The Citadel), carries a swagger stick as part of his Drill Sergeant Nasty routine while training new cadets.
  • In Pyramids High Priest Dios carries a staff which supposedly gives him dominion over the living and the dead. He uses it to restrain the mummified Pharaohs, because for seven thousand years, the lesser priests had believed it did.

Live Action TV[]

  • Carry On Sergeant - Carried by officers and sergeants.
  • Monty Python's Flying Circus - Carried by a color sergeant while marching up and down the square.
  • Hogan's Heroes - In addition to his monocle, carrying around a swagger stick tucked under one arm is the trademark of Colonel Klink
  • Doctor Who - Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart often carried a Swagger stick with him
    • The Sontaran baton is a device of Sontaran design which was carried by certain high ranking officers of the Sontaran Empire. They are symbols of rank and status, as well as multi-function tools.
    • The Time Lords were sometimes shown carrying staffs as part of their extremely ornate ceremonial regalia.
  • Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - The Grand Nagus's staff, which Ferengi are supposed to kiss as a sign of respect.
  • Captain Blackadder carries a swagger stick from time to time in the fourth season of Blackadder, most prominently in the credits when he's leading a company on parade.
  • About 50% of Power Rangers Big Bads. Most can fire energy blasts, and cast spells if you're a magic-based villain (or even if not. Sometimes, how "point, zap, and something happens" works isn't always addressed.) The last few series have lacked it, though.

Religion, Mythology and Folklore[]

  • Mercury's winged staff and the rod of Asclepius in Greek Mythology.
  • Aaron's rod in The Bible, used to show that he and his brother Moses had been vested with divine power.
  • Zoroaster is commonly depicted as carrying a baresman, a bundle of twigs bound together to form a sort of staff, which a symbol of priesthood, or a varza, a form of ceromonial mace, usually stylized as a steel rod crowned by a bull's head.
  • The khakkhara (jap. shakujō) is a ringed staff used in prayer, or as a weapon. It originated in India, it has been used in defensive techniques by traveling Buddhist monks all over Asia for centuries.

Tabletop Games[]

  • Warhammer - Overtyrant Greasus Goldtooth has a sceptre bigger than a man.

Video Games[]

  • Shikieiki Yamaxanadu, Judge of the Dead in Touhou Project, wields the Rod of Remorse, which she uses to weigh a soul's karma after death.
  • Rift - One of the items in the game is a Mayor's Staff of Office
  • Oblivion - The Staff of Sheogorath is described as a symbol of office for the Madgod in Oblivion.
  • The staff of Pope Alexander VI in Assassin's Creed II turns out to be more than just a symbol of office: it's actually a Piece of Eden.
  • A number of bosses in World of Warcraft carry various rods and staves of office to be looted from their corpses. It might seem disrespectful to whack someone over the head with a royal scepter, but there you go.
  • In Final Fantasy XIII both the Big Bad Primarch Galenth Dysley who bears a very papal apperance carries the long staff version that doubles as a Magic Staff while his lackey Lieutenant Colonel Jihl Nabaat carries a swagger stick that she also wields as a weapon.
  • In Kid Icarus: Uprising every goddess carries one.

Web Original[]

Other Media[]

  • Bionicle - A Badge of Office is a staff or tool used by Turaga to symbolize their experience and knowledge. Several of these take the form of a staff.
    • Staffs of Office are artifacts used by powerful Soul Renders, which grant special powers in addition to symbolizing their prestige.

Real Life[]

  • The use of staffs, rods and scepters by kings is Older Than Dirt and visual evidence goes back at least to the ancient Egyptians and Babylonians.
  • Teachers or prefects in schools traditionally carried canes or switches which marked their right (and potential threat) to administer canings
  • Orchestral conductors have in their batons symbols of authority as well as tools of their trade.
    • Originally they carried a heavier staff, which they used to literally beat the rhythm. The practice waned after one broke his toe with the staff, and died of blood poisoning.
  • Church sidesmen or dodsmen bear sticks or rods or wands of office, while bishops may use a crozier or crook.
    • Bishop's staff actually symbolically represents a shepherd's staff.
  • Roman Centurions carried a vinewood staff as a badge of office, and used them to dole out corporal punishment, cf Cedo Alteram, a Centurion nicknamed for his tendency to break them off on his subordinates.
  • Roman fasceswere a bundle of stick with a blade attached, and were used to symbolize the power of magistrates in the Roman Republic. Representations of fasces can still be found in modern American and European symbolism, generally associated with government authority.
  • In most Commonwealth armies, swagger sticks are officers' accouterments and Warrant Officers and Non-commissioned Officers carry what are referred to as "pace sticks". These are used for a variety of ceromonial purposes, such as Ramp Ceremonies when the remains of the fallen are loaded onto aircraft on Kandahar Airfield for their final flight out of Afghanistan. Drill canes and regimental sticks are also used, and officers in cavalry regiments carry riding crops.
  • North Korea: in this youtube video of the 2005 Arirang Festival Mass Games a baton is used (21:00) for the women's military performance.
  • In several countries (especially Britain and Germany), Field Marshals were traditionally given batons upon their promotion.
  • The ceremonial mace is common in most English-speaking legislatures; the UK parliament at Westminster started the tradition (the Mace of the House of Commons — Cromwell apparently asked for 'that fool's bauble' to be removed as he angrily dismissed the Rump in 1653, but it didn't take), and the new devolved Scottish Parliament and Welsh Assembly both have very cool-looking, postmodern maces. The Australian House of Representatives and various other Commonwealth legislatures also have maces. Even the United States House of Representatives has a mace: thirteen ebony rods bound with silver (echoing the fasces of the Roman Republic) topped with a silver eagle on a globe; this is a subversion, because the US is, of course, a republic, with no king.
    • Meanwhile, the officer responsible for the security of Britain's House of Lords is "The Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod." (Traditionally, the post is given to a retired general, and he does indeed carry a black rod on ceremonial occasions, like when the monarch comes to open this year's session of parliament.)
    • The United States House and Senate each have a Sergeant at Arms whose job it is to keep order in their respective chambers. Each is given a ceremonial mace (more of an elaborate scepter, really) with which to keep order. If any congressional members become unruly, the presiding officer can have the Sergeant at Arms "present" the mace at the offender, which is usually enough to restore order. Sadly, no examples exist of the mace being used to beat insubordinates into submission.
  • Buddhist monks use the Khakkhara.
Advertisement