The Padawan braid was a symbol worn in the hair or head that marked the rank of a Jedi Padawan. The braid was composed of a long strand of intricately woven hair typically worn across the right shoulder. In the case of Padawans from species that did not grow hair on their heads, alternatives such as silka beads were worn instead. When a Padawan was declared a Jedi Knight after passing the trials, the braid was shed. If a Padawan was expelled from the Jedi Order, the braid was ripped off, as happened to Ahsoka Tano after she was framed for treason.
Description[]
Padawan braids were a symbol of rank used to distinguish apprentices within the Jedi Order.[2] They were lengths of intricately woven hair,[3] typically worn across the right shoulder. Padawans which belonged to species that did not grow hair on their heads would wear alternatives such as silka beads.[4] Some Jedi Initiate began to grow their braids before their apprenticeship even began,[5] as was the case with youngling Caleb Dume.[6]
Padawan braids would be shed upon attaining the rank of Jedi Knight after passing the Jedi Trials.[7] Padawans who were expelled from the Jedi Order would have their braids ripped off.[2]
History[]
High Republic Era[]
During the High Republic Era, Jedi Masters could decide whether or not their apprentice had to wear a Padawan braid.[8] Pantoran Padawan Kevmo Zink liked his braid because it reminded him that he had a home amongst the Jedi, comparing it to the traditional clan tattoos his birth family had given him.[9]
In 232 BBY,[10] Master Cohmac Vitus did not intend to require his next apprentice to wear a braid, while Padawan Reath Silas had unsuccessfully attempted to persuade his Master, Jora Malli, to not make him wear it any longer. Silas' braid was later ripped out by a Wookiee infant he rescued from the starship Journeyman, and he thought he would have to grow it back. Vitus eventually took Silas on as his apprentice after they found that Malli had died[8] at the Battle of Kur,[11] and Silas grew a new braid.[12]
While stranded on the jungle moon Wevo[13] in 232 BBY,[10] Padawan Imri Cantaros was dealing with grief over the death of his Master, Douglas Sunvale, and feelings of envy regarding the skills of Jedi prodigy Vernestra Rwoh, who was only sixteen, two years older than him, but already a Knight. Seeing Rwoh braiding her hair made him touch his Padawan braid self-consciously.[13] In 230 BBY,[14] Padawans Qort and Farzala Tarabal cut their own braids off after they were knighted by their Masters, Tabakan Pak and Obratuk Glii.[7]
Late Republic Era[]
During his time as a Padawan, Obi-Wan Kenobi developed a bad habit of tugging at his Padawan braid when nervous, a habit he hoped to break.[15]
Togruta Padawan Ahsoka Tano's silka bead braid was stolen by bounty hunter Cad Bane during the Battle of Devaron.[16] After Tano helped capture Bane on Naboo, she took the braid back, declaring she had earned the right to wear it again.[17] Late in the Clone Wars, Tano was framed for the bombing of the Jedi Temple hangar,[18] and was expelled from the Order so she could be put on trial, with her braid being removed by a Jedi Temple Guard. After her master Anakin Skywalker managed to clear his apprentice's name by revealing fallen Padawan Barriss Offee as the true traitor, Tano was offered her braid and position in the Order back. However, having lost faith in the Order and the Jedi High Council, she declined and left.[19]
After the fall[]
With the execution of Order 66 and ensuing Great Jedi Purge commanded by the newly-proclaimed Galactic Emperor Sheev Palpatine, who in secret was the Sith Lord Darth Sidious, the Jedi Order at large was destroyed[20] in 19 BBY[21] as the Galactic Empire rose to power, ushering in the Imperial Era. With the Order destroyed and most Jedi wiped out,[20] few individual continued to make use of the Padawan braid,[22] whether it be because they were killed while wearing it[20] or they needed to go into hiding by covering up their Jedi past. By wearing a Padawan braid, one would effectively be advertising themself as a Jedi at a time when the Order was outlawed and being hunted across the stars. After he survived Order 66, Padawan Caleb Dume's occasional rescuer Janus Kasmir made Dume cut his braid off and abandon his Jedi robes in order to better hide from the Galactic Empire.[23]
Iskat Akaris recovered her mother's Padawan braid on Pkori, dismissively describing the tradition to her elders as a "Jedi thing."[22] Ezra Bridger, who was trained as a Padawan by Dume—who changed his name to Kanan Jarrus—during the Imperial Era, did not wear a Padawan braid,[24] instead keeping his original hair style[25] and then adopting a short cut.[26] Another survivor of the Purge was former Jedi General Baylan Skoll, who took up the life of a mercenary and trained an apprentice of his own, Shin Hati, to be "more than a Jedi." Nonetheless, Hati wore a Padawan-style braid of her own.[27]
Behind the scenes[]
Padawan braids first appeared in the 1999 film Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace.[3]
Ewan McGregor, the actor who played Obi-Wan Kenobi in The Phantom Menace, said that the crew were looking for a military sense or something in the world of monks for Kenobi's hairstyle. He said the padawan braid hairstyle was similar to the hair of people who shave their head for religious orders. McGregor had a braid that was stuck into his hair every day, and he liked the look of it.[28]
In the Star Wars: The Clone Wars season three episode "The Citadel," Ahsoka Tano's braid is erroneously missing in the scene where she speaks to Plo Koon about joining the Citadel rescue mission, as well as in a later scene where the Citadel infiltration team encounters security turrets in the hallway.[29]
Appearances[]
Non-canon appearances[]
- The LEGO Star Wars Holiday Special
- Star Wars: Visions — "Tatooine Rhapsody" (In flashback(s))
- Star Wars: Visions — "The Elder"
- Star Wars: Visions — "The Village Bride"
- "The Elder" — Big Gangan Vol.06
Sources[]
Non-canon sources[]
Notes and references[]
- ↑ Star Wars: The Last Jedi: Expanded Edition
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "The Wrong Jedi" Episode Gallery on StarWars.com (backup link)
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace
- ↑ Star Wars: Absolutely Everything You Need to Know
- ↑ Star Wars: Episode II Attack of the Clones
- ↑ Kanan 7
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 The High Republic Adventures (2021) 13
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 The High Republic: Into the Dark
- ↑ The High Republic: Path of Deceit
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 Star Wars: Timelines dates the events of The High Republic: Light of the Jedi to 232 BBY. The High Republic: Into the Dark and The High Republic: A Test of Courage are both set concurrently to Light of the Jedi.
- ↑ The High Republic: Light of the Jedi
- ↑ The High Republic: Out of the Shadows
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 The High Republic: A Test of Courage
- ↑ The events of The High Republic Adventures (2021) 13 take place concurrently to the events of The High Republic: Midnight Horizon, which Star Wars: Timelines dates to 230 BBY.
- ↑ Master & Apprentice
- ↑ Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "Cargo of Doom"
- ↑ Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "Children of the Force"
- ↑ Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "The Jedi Who Knew Too Much"
- ↑ Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "The Wrong Jedi"
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 20.2 Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith
- ↑ Star Wars: Galactic Atlas
- ↑ 22.0 22.1 Inquisitor: Rise of the Red Blade
- ↑ Kanan 3
- ↑ Star Wars Rebels — "Rise of the Old Masters"
- ↑ Star Wars Rebels: Spark of Rebellion
- ↑ Star Wars Rebels: Steps Into Shadow
- ↑ Ahsoka — "Part Six: Far, Far Away"
- ↑ Ewan McGregor on Obi-Wan Kenobi's Ever Changing Hair Styles | Entertainment Weekly on the Entertainment Weekly YouTube channel (backup link)
- ↑ Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "The Citadel"