Maybe, but I don’t think so, at least not directly. I can’t find a source, though.
I just think the concept of Knights and Arthurian stuff was popular, and they just both came from the same general popular ideas, instead of one coming from the other.
It wasn’t. It was a term - frequently sarcastic eventually, as in this cartoon - used to describe the “noble” behaviors of southerners.
Here’s an article from the time on it, talking about how the rumored “southern chivalry” was anything but: https://www.historians.org/teaching-and-learning/teaching-resources-for-historians/sixteen-months-to-sumter/newspaper-index/new-haven-daily-palladium/southern-chivalry
As someone else.mentioned, a form of it became “southern hospitality” and survived, usually in the complimentary way.
Sounds like the “knights of the KKK” might have come from the southern chivalry thing.
Maybe, but I don’t think so, at least not directly. I can’t find a source, though.
I just think the concept of Knights and Arthurian stuff was popular, and they just both came from the same general popular ideas, instead of one coming from the other.