Naming the American Civil War

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

There have been numerous alternative names for the American Civil War that reflect the historical, political, and cultural sensitivities of different groups and regions.[1]

Contents

[edit] Naming the war

The following names have been, or are, used to describe the conflict itself, listed roughly by frequency of use. The first two names have seen enduring usage; the remaining names have been more isolated.

[edit] Enduring names

[edit] Civil War

In the United States Civil War is the most common term for the conflict; it has been used by the overwhelming majority of reference books, scholarly journals, dictionaries, encyclopedias, popular histories, and mass media in the United States since the early 20th century.[2] The National Park Service, the government organization entrusted by the United States Congress to preserve the battlefields of the war, uses this term.[3] It is also the oldest term for the war. Writings of prominent men such as Jefferson Davis, Robert E. Lee, Ulysses S. Grant, William Tecumseh Sherman, P.G.T. Beauregard, Nathan Bedford Forrest, and Judah P. Benjamin used the term "Civil War" both before and during the conflict. Abraham Lincoln used it on multiple occasions.[4][5][6]

English-speaking historians outside the United States usually refer to the conflict as the "American Civil War" or, less often, "U.S. Civil War".[citation needed] These variations are also used in the United States in cases in which the war might otherwise be confused with another historical event (such as the English Civil War).

[edit] War Between the States

The term War Between the States was rarely used during the war but became common afterwards in the South.

  • The Confederate government avoided the term "civil war" and referred in official documents to the "War between the Confederate States of America and the United States of America."[7] There are a handful of known references during the war to "the war between the states."[8]
  • European diplomacy produced a similar formula for avoiding the phrase "civil war." Queen Victoria's proclamation of British neutrality referred to "hostilities ... between the Government of the United States of America and certain States styling themselves the Confederate States of America".[7]
  • Efforts to convince the United States Congress to adopt the term, beginning in 1913, were unsuccessful. Congress has never adopted an official name for the war.
  • Franklin Delano Roosevelt referred to the Civil War as "the four-year War Between the States." In his eyes, this was the only crisis that had "ever threatened our national unity." These lines were spoken in the opening paragraphs of his 1941 Annual Message to Congress on January 6th, 1941.[9]
  • References to the "War Between the States" turn up in federal and state court documents from time to time.[10]
  • The names "Civil War" and "War Between the States" have been used jointly in some formal contexts. For example, the war's centenary in the 1960s created the "Georgia Civil War Centennial Commission Commemorating the War Between the States".
  • In 1994, the U.S. Postal Service issued commemorative stamps entitled "The Civil War / The War Between the States".
  • The official war records of the United States refer to this war as "The War of the Rebellion".

[edit] Other historical terms

[edit] War of the Rebellion

During and immediately after the war, U.S. officials and pro-Union writers often referred to Confederates as "Rebels" and to the war itself as "the Rebellion." "War of the Rebellion" is the name found on many war monuments in the North. In modern usage, however, the term "War of the Rebellion" usually refers only to the collection of documents compiled and published by the U.S. War Department as The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1880–1901, usually referred to as the Official Records. This 70-volume collection is the chief source of historical documentation for those interested in Civil War research.

[edit] War for Southern Independence

The "War for Southern Independence" is a name used by many Southerners in reference to the war.[11] While popular on the Confederate side during the war, the term's popularity fell in the immediate aftermath of the South's failure to gain independence. The term resurfaced in the late 20th century. To Southerners, the terminology parallels usage of the term "American War for Independence", as demonstrated by the popular poem published in the early stages of the hostilities under the title South Carolina; the prologue of which unambiguously refers to the war as the "Third War for Independence" (specifically naming the War of 1812 as the Second such War)[12] C.f. "The tea has been thrown overboard. The Revolution of 1860 has been initiated." -- 8th Nov. 1860, Charleston Mercury (regarding post-election 'fall-out').[13] The Second American Revolution was coined by historian Charles Beard in the 1920s to emphasize the completeness of the northern victory (and still used by the Sons of Confederate Veterans organization, though with a quite different meaning).[14] The name is also used in Ward Moore's alternate history novella Bring the Jubilee.

[edit] War of Northern Aggression

The War of Northern Aggression is a name which emphasizes the opinion that the Southern states had the right to secede from the union and that the North was unjust in making war against the South. This term is consistent with the belief of the partisans of the Lost Cause that the North unjustly invaded the South.

[edit] Other terms

Other terms for the war have seen even less frequent usage, particularly in modern times.

In the South: War in Defense of Virginia, Mr. Lincoln's War , and War of Secession. (War of Secession is the common way of referring to the war in Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, German, Romanian and Polish.)

In the North: War of the Insurrection, Slaveholders War, Great Rebellion, War to Save the Union.

Later writers invented terms such as War for Abolition, War of Southern Reaction, War to Prevent Southern Independence, and Second American Revolution which were rarely used in print.

Immediately after the war, the following expressions were common in the South: The War, The Late Unpleasantness, and The Lost Cause.

[edit] Naming the combatants

[edit] Naming the battles and armies

Civil War Battle Names
Date Southern name Northern name
July 21, 1861 First Manassas First Bull Run
August 10, 1861 Oak Hills Wilson's Creek
October 21, 1861 Leesburg Ball's Bluff
January 19, 1862 Mill Springs Logan's Cross Roads
March 7March 8, 1862 Elkhorn Tavern Pea Ridge
April 6April 7, 1862 Shiloh Pittsburg Landing
May 31June 1, 1862 Seven Pines Fair Oaks
June 27, 1862 Gaines's Mill Chickahominy River
August 29
August 30, 1862
Second Manassas Second Bull Run
September 1, 1862 Ox Hill Chantilly
September 14, 1862 Boonsboro South Mountain
September 17, 1862 Sharpsburg Antietam
October 8, 1862 Perryville Chaplin Hills
December 31, 1862
January 2, 1863
Murfreesboro Stones River
April 8, 1864 Mansfield Sabine Cross Roads
September 19, 1864 Winchester Opequon

There is a disparity between the sides in naming some of the battles of the war. The Union forces frequently named battles for bodies of water that were prominent on or near the battlefield; Confederates most often used the name of the nearest town. Because of this, many battles actually have two widely used names. However, not all of the disparities are based on this land-versus-water conflict. Many modern accounts of Civil War battles use the names established by the North. However, for some battles, the Southern name has become the standard. The National Park Service occasionally uses the Southern names for their battlefield parks located in the South, such as Manassas and Shiloh. Some examples of battles with dual names are shown in the table.

Historian Shelby Foote explains that most Northerners were urban and regarded bodies of water as noteworthy; most Southerners were rural and regarded towns as noteworthy.[15]

Civil War armies were also named in a manner reminiscent of the battlefields: Northern armies were frequently named for major rivers (Army of the Potomac, Army of the Tennessee, Army of the Mississippi), Southern armies for states or geographic regions (Army of Northern Virginia, Army of Tennessee, Army of Mississippi).

Units smaller than armies were named differently in many cases. Corps were usually written out (First Army Corps or more simply, First Corps), although a post-war convention developed to designate Union corps using Roman numerals (XI Corps). Often, particularly with Southern armies, corps were more commonly known by the name of the leader (Hardee's Corps, Polk's Corps).

Union brigades were given numeric designations (1st, 2nd, ...), whereas Confederate brigades were frequently named after their commanding general (Hood's Brigade, Gordon's Brigade, ...). Confederate brigades so-named retained the name of the original commander even when commanded temporarily by another man; for example, at the Battle of Gettysburg, Hoke's Brigade was commanded by Isaac Avery and Nicholl's Brigade by Jesse Williams. Nicknames were common in both armies, such as the Iron Brigade and the Stonewall Brigade.

Union artillery batteries were generally named numerically; Confederate batteries by the name of the town or county in which they were recruited (Fluvanna Artillery). Again, they were often simply referred to by their commander's name (Moody's Battery, Parker's Battery).

[edit] In other languages


Name of the Civil War in other Languages
Language Name
Arabic الحرب الأهلية الأمريكية
al-Ḥarb al-'Ahlīyah al-Amrīkīyah
Translation: American Civil War
Basque Ameriketako Estatu Batuetako Gerra Zibilan
Catalan Guerra civil dels Estats Units
Guerra civil americana

Guerra de Secessió

Chinese Simplified: 南北战争
Traditional: 南北戰爭
Pinyin: Nán Běi Zhànzhèng
Translation: North-South War
Czech Americká občanská válka
Danish amerikanske borgerkrig
Dutch Amerikaanse Burgeroorlog
Esperanto Usona Enlanda Milito
Estonian Ameerika Ühendriikide kodusõda
setsessioonisõda
Farsi جنگ داخلی امریک
Finnish Yhdysvaltain sisällissota
French Guerre de Sécession
Gaelic/Irish Cogadh Cathara Ameireaganach
Galego Guerra Civil Americana
Guerra de Secesión
German Sezessionskrieg
Amerikanischer Bürgerkrieg
Hebrew מלחמת האזרחים האמריקנית
Hindi अमरीकी गृहयुद्ध
Icelandic Þrælastríðið
Interlingua Guerra Civil American
Italian guerra di secessione americana
guerra civile americana
Japanese 南北戦争 (なんぼくせんそう)
Korean 남북 전쟁 or 남북전쟁
Latvian (Lettish) Amerikas pilsoņu karš
Norwegian Amerikanske borgerkrigen
Polish Wojna secesyjna
Portuguese Guerra Civil Americana
Guerra da Secessão
Romanian Războiul Civil American
Russian Гражданская война в США
Slovak Americká občianska vojna
vojna Severu proti Juhu
Slovenian Ameriška državljanska vojna
Spanish Guerra Civil Estadounidense
Guerra de Secesión
Swedish Amerikanska inbördeskriget
Turkish Amerikan İç Savaşı
Vietnamese Nội chiến Hoa Kỳ
Welsh Rhyfel Cartref America

In Chinese, Japanese and Korean, the term War between the North and the South (literally, "North-South War") is widely used for the American Civil War.

In French, German, Italian and Polish the war is most often referred to as the "(American) War of Secession."

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Political scientists use two criteria to define a civil war: (1) The warring groups must be from the same country and fighting for control of the political center, control over a separatist state or to force a major change in policy. (2) At least 1,000 people must have been killed in total, with at least 100 from each side. See Edward Wong, "A Matter of Definition: What Makes a Civil War, and Who Declares It So?" New York Times November 26, 2006 online at [1]
  2. ^ See titles listed in Oscar Handlin et al, Harvard Guide to American History (1954) pp 385-98.
  3. ^ The Civil War
  4. ^ Proclamation, August 12, 1861.
  5. ^ Message to the Senate, May 26, 1862
  6. ^ Gettysburg Address, November 19, 1863.
  7. ^ a b c The Brig Amy Warwick, et al., 67 U.S. 635, *636, 673 (1862)
  8. ^ Jefferson Davis’ Memorandum
  9. ^ "My Fellow Americans" by Michael Waldman, former White House Chief Scriptwriter. Page 111, also, Disc 1 Track 19
  10. ^ For example: Dairyland Greyhound Park, Inc. v. Doyle, 719 N.W.2d 408, *449 (Wis., 2006)(“Prior to the War Between the States all but three states had barred lotteries”).
  11. ^ "Davis, Burke, The Civil War: Strange and Fascinating Facts, New York: The Fairfax Press, 1982. ISBN 0-517-37151-0, pp. 79-80.
  12. ^ War Songs and Poems of the Southern Confederacy 1861-1865, H. M. Wharton, compiler and editor, Edison, NJ: Castle Books, 2000, ISBN 0-7858-1273-3, pp. 69.
  13. ^ The Civil War: A Film by Ken Burns. Dir. Ken Burns, Narr. David McCullough, Writ. and prod. Ken Burns. PBS DVD Gold edition, Warner Home Video, 2002, ISBN 0-7806-3887-5.
  14. ^ SCV website.
  15. ^ The Civil War, Geoffrey Ward, with Ric Burns and Ken Burns.1990. "Interview with Shelby Foote."

[edit] Further reading

[edit] External links

Languages