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Southern chivalry

Southern chivalry, or the Cavalier myth, was a popular concept describing the aristocratic honor culture of the Southern United States during the Antebellum, Civil War, and early Postbellum eras. The archetype of a Southern gentleman became popular as a chivalric ideal of the slaveowning planter class, emphasizing both familial and personal honor in addition to the ability to defend either by force if necessary. Southern chivalry is today seen as an attempt to justify the racist and patriarchal stratification of Southern society, with the goal of maintaining or legitimizing the human rights abuses of American slavery.[1][2]

Prior to the Civil War this concept of a gentleman's honor was frequently used as a basis for duels and other forms of extrajudicial violence, most notably the caning of Charles Sumner by Preston Brooks, and contributed to the militarization of the South by encouraging young men to be taught at military schools.


By the later Antebellum era, the term had taken on an ironic meaning for Northerners and abolitionists, among whom it was used as a pejorative to describe what was perceived as the barbarism of Southern slave owners and their hostility and duplicity in dealing with the North, as was particularly seen in various political caricatures before and during the war.


In the modern era the romanticization of Southern chivalry became a core aspect of the Lost Cause myth, which portrays the Confederate States of America as a morally and culturally superior civilization defending its honor against a materialistic and immoral North.

History of the Southern United States

 – American Civil War veterans' organization for soldiers and sailors of the CSA

United Confederate Veterans

United Daughters of the Confederacy

Southern Cross of Honor

 – Artistic, literary, musical, and intellectual movement

Romanticism

Christianity in the United States

List of duels in the United States

List of Confederate duels

 – Racial belief system developed by British and American individuals in the 19th century

Anglo-Saxonism in the 19th century

and Confederate literature

Anti-Tom novels

and Category:People using the U.S. civilian title colonel

Colonel (U.S. honorary title)

 – Neoclassical architectural style characteristic of the 19th-century Southern United States

Antebellum architecture

 – Slogan of the pre-Civil War American South

King Cotton

The Mind of the South, Knompf, 1941.

Cash, W. J.

Drake, Ross (March 2004). . Smithsonian Magazine. Archived from the original on 2014-01-07. Retrieved 2012-10-22.

"Duel! Defenders of honor or shoot-on-sight vigilantes? Even in 19th-century America, it was hard to tell"

Myers, Cayce. "Southern Traitor or American Hero?: The Representation of Robert E. Lee in the Northern Press from 1865 to 1870." Journalism History, vol. 41, no. 4, 2016, pp. 211–21.

Towers, Frank (2010). "The Origins of the Antimodern South: Romantic Nationalism and the Secession Movement in the American South". In Don Harrison Doyle (ed.). Secession as an International Phenomenon From America's Civil War to Contemporary Separatist Movements. University of Georgia Press. pp. 179–180, 183–187.  9780820330082.

ISBN

Watson, Ritchie D. Jr. The Cavalier in Virginia Fiction. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1985.

Wyatt-Brown, Betrarm. Southern honor: ethics and behavior in the Old South. New York: Oxford University Press, 1982.