Refined by:
- Publication date: 1710s (x)
- Publisher: Harper & Brothers (x)
- Places of publication: New York, NY (x)
- Genre
- Biography (1)
- Novel (Romance) (1)
- Subject heading
- Bayard, Pierre Terrail, seigneur de, ca. 1473-1524. (1)
- Beaufort (S.C.) -- Fiction (1)
- Frontier and pioneer life -- Fiction (1)
- Frontier and pioneer life -- South Carolina -- Fiction. (1)
- Historical fiction. (1)
- Indians of North America -- Fiction. (1)
- Indians of North America -- South Carolina -- Fiction. (1)
- South Carolina -- History -- Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775 -- Fiction (1)
- Yamassee Indians -- Fiction (1)
- Time period
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The Life of the Chevalier BayardMedieval History | Biography | Harper & Brothers | 1847 For Simms, it
was in a time “when chivalry was at its lowest condition in Christian Europe,” that
the Chevalier Bayard provided the world, “the happiest illustration, in a
single great example, of its ancient pride and character,” and “the most
admirable model to the generous ambition of the young that we find in all the
pages of history.”[1] Simms wrote The Life of Chevalier Bayard, a biography of the late-medieval
French knight, to serve as an archetype of virtue for Americans. In 1845, Simms had written two articles on
Bayard for Southern and Western[2],
and ... |
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The Yemassee. A Romance of Carolina.British Colonial History | Novel (Romance) | Harper & Brothers | 1835 The Yemassee is historically the best known of
the long fictions of William Gilmore Simms.
Set on the South Carolina frontier, Simms’s third book-length fiction
treats the Yemassee War of 1715-17, when the Yemassee Indians, with their
Spanish and Native American allies, attacked the low country colonial
settlements. Writing in the midst of the
removal of natives from east of the Mississippi to the newly created Indian
Territory in the future Oklahoma, Simms emphasized such motives for the war as
the colonists’ need for land, the conflict between rival European powers ... |