truncheon

noun·/ˈtrʌn.tʃən/

A short club or baton, historically a weapon and later a tool of policing. Authority made hand-held. A truncheon is blunt: force without flourish.

The truncheon hung at his belt like a sentence waiting to be spoken.

Etymology

From Old French forms related to tronc “trunk,” from Latin truncus. The idea is literal: a shortened piece of wood—trunk made portable.

Related Words

batonmodern term, often less ominous
cudgela rough club; similar
bludgeonclub and verb; emphasizes brutality
maceceremonial club; older cousin