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{{emotion}}
A '''romantic friendship''', '''passionate friendship''', or '''affectionate friendship''' is a very close but typically non-
The term is typically used in historical scholarship, and describes a very close relationship between people of the same sex during a period of history when there was not a social category of ''
[[File:Frances Shimer Cindarella Gregory 1869.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Shimer College]] founders Cindarella Gregory and [[Frances Shimer]] in 1869; their extremely close relationship has been characterized as a "passionate friendship".<ref>{{cite journal | last = Malkmus | first = Doris | title = Frances Wood Shimer, Cindarella Gregory, and the 1853 founding of Shimer College | journal = Journal of Illinois History | volume = 6 | pages = 200 | year = 2003| publisher = Illinois Historic Preservation Agency | issn = 1522-0532 }}</ref>]]
==Historical examples==
The study of historical romantic friendship is difficult because the primary source material consists of writing about love relationships, which typically took the form of
===Shakespeare and the "Fair Youth"===
{{Main|Sexuality of William Shakespeare}}
The content of Shakespeare's works has raised the question of whether he may have been bisexual.
Although 26 of [[Shakespeare's sonnets]] are love poems addressed to a married woman (the "[[
Among those of the latter interpretation, in the preface to his 1961 Pelican edition, Douglas Bush writes:<ref>{{cite book |author1=William Shakespeare |editor1-last=Bush |editor1-first=Douglas |editor2-last=Harbage |editor2-first=Alfred |title=Sonnets |date=1961 |publisher=Penguin |location=Baltimore, Maryland, USA |chapter=Preface (by Douglas Bush)}}</ref>
{{quotation|Since modern readers are unused to such ardor in masculine friendship and are likely to leap at the notion of homosexuality… we may remember that such an ideal, often exalted above the love of women, could exist in real life, from Montaigne to Sir Thomas Browne, and was conspicuous in Renaissance literature.
Bush cites [[Montaigne]], who distinguished male friendships from "that other, licentious [[Greek love]]",<ref>Rollins 1:55; Bush cited Montaigne's 1580 work "On Friendship," in which the exact quote was: "And this other {{notatypo|Greeke licence}} is justly abhorred by our {{notatypo|customes}}." {{harvnb|Montaigne|1580|p=4}}.</ref> as evidence of a platonic interpretation.
In his discussion of Bush's contention that the sonnets are an expression of intense, idealised, non-sexual friendship, what he calls the "Renaissance cult of [male] friendship", Crompton, in ''Homosexuality and Civilization'', points to the sonnets' complaints of "sleepless nights", "sharp anguish", and "fearful jealousy" arising from love of the fair youth. Crompton concludes these are "torments" such that "friendship hardly could" cause. He notes also that the writer [[C. S. Lewis]], though not a proponent of a homosexual interpretation, did find the sonnets' language "too lover-like for ordinary male friendship" and declared himself unable to find any comparable language used between friends elsewhere in 16th-century literature.{{sfn|Crompton|2003|p=380}}
===Montaigne and Etienne de La Boétie===
The French philosopher [[Montaigne]] described the concept of romantic friendship (without using this English term) in his essay "On Friendship". In addition to distinguishing this type of love from homosexuality ("this other Greek licence"), another way in which Montaigne differed from the modern view<ref>[[John Ruskin]]'s 1865 essay "On Queen's Gardens" is a good example of the later view that emotionality was a female province; Kate Millet analyzes this essay in ''Sexual Politics'' (1969, 1970, 1990, 2000), University of Illinois Press, {{ISBN|0-252-06889-0}}. Many modern books such as Carmen Renee Berry's ''Girlfriends: Invisible Ties'' (1998), Wildcat Canyon Press, {{ISBN|1-885171-20-X}}, argue that intensity in friendship is a female capacity.</ref> was that he felt that friendship and platonic emotion were a primarily masculine capacity (apparently unaware of the custom of female romantic friendship which also existed):
{{quotation|Seeing (to speake truly) that the ordinary sufficiency of women cannot answer this conference and communication, the nurse of this sacred bond: nor seem their minds strong enough to endure the pulling of a knot so hard, so fast, and durable.{{sfn|Montaigne|1580|p=4}}}}
Lesbian-feminist historian [[Lillian Faderman]] cites Montaigne, using "On Friendship" as evidence that romantic friendship was distinct from homosexuality, since the former could be extolled by famous and respected writers, who simultaneously disparaged homosexuality. (The quotation also furthers Faderman's beliefs that gender and sexuality are [[Social construction|socially constructed]], since they indicate that each sex has been thought of as "better" at intense friendship in one or another period of history.)
=== Alexander Hamilton and John Laurens ===
Shortly after his marriage, while in [[George Washington]]'s camp during the American Revolutionary Era, [[John Laurens]] met and became extremely close friends with [[Alexander Hamilton]]. They exchanged many letters during the several years when different assignments and Laurens' capture by the British kept them apart; for example, when the terms of Laurens' parole prevented him from being present at Hamilton's wedding to [[Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton|Elizabeth Schuyler]] in December 1780, even though Hamilton had invited him.<ref>{{Citation|chapter=Excerpt from a Letter to Lieutenant Colonel John Laurens, September 12, 1780|pages=143|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=9781108381277|doi=10.1017/9781108381277.025|title=The Political Writings of Alexander Hamilton|year=2017}}</ref> While emotional language was not uncommon in romantic friendships among those of the same gender in this historical period,<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/alexanderhamilto00cher|title=Alexander Hamilton|
Stating that "one must tread gingerly in approaching this matter," Hamilton biographer [[Ron Chernow]] wrote that it is impossible to say "with any certainty" that Laurens and Hamilton were lovers, noting that such an affair would have required the exercise of "extraordinary precautions" because sodomy was a capital offense throughout the colonies at the time.<ref name=":0" /> Chernow concluded that based on available evidence, "At the very least, we can say that Hamilton developed something like an adolescent crush on his friend."<ref name=":0" /> According to Chernow, "Hamilton did not form friendships easily and never again revealed his interior life to another man as he had to Laurens", and after Laurens' death, "Hamilton shut off some compartment of his emotions and never reopened it."<ref name=":0" />
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{{Main|Sexuality of Abraham Lincoln}}
=== Romantic friendships in women's colleges ===
As the [[Women's suffrage in the United States|American suffrage movement]] succeeded in gaining rights for white middle- and upper-class women, heterosexual marriage became less of a necessity, and many more women went to college and continued to live in female-centric communities after graduation.<ref name="Faderman"/>{{
The practice of "smashing" involved one student showering another with gifts: notes, chocolates, sometimes even locks of hair. When the object of the student's affections was wooed and the two of them began spending all their time together, the "aggressor" was perceived by her friends as "smashed".<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Sahli|first=Nancy Ann|date=1979|title=Smashing: Women's Relationships before the Fall|journal=Chrysalis|volume=8|pages=21}}</ref> In the early twentieth century, "crush" gradually replaced the term "smash", and generally signified a younger girl's infatuation with an older peer.<ref name="helen lh">{{Cite book|title=Alma mater
Romantic friendships kindled in women's colleges sometimes continued after graduation, with women living together in "[[Boston marriages]]" or cooperative houses. Women who openly committed themselves to other women often found acceptance of their commitment and lifestyle in academic fields, and felt comfortable expressing their feelings for their same-sex companions.<ref name="helen lh"/>{{
At the turn of the century, smashes and crushes were considered an essential part of the women's college experience, and students who wrote home spoke openly about their involvement in romantic friendships.<ref name="helen lh"/>{{
==Biblical and religious
Proponents of the romantic friendship hypothesis also make reference to the
The relationship between [[King David]] and [[Jonathan (1 Samuel)|Jonathan]], son of [[King Saul]], is often cited as an example of male romantic friendship; for example, Faderman
[[Ruth (biblical figure)|Ruth]] and her
{{quotation|Entreat me not to leave you or to return from following you; for where you go I will go, and where you lodge I will lodge; your people shall be my people, and your God my God; where you die I will die, and there will I be buried.<ref>Ruth to Naomi, Ruth 1:15-17.</ref>}}
Faderman writes that women in Renaissance and Victorian times made reference to both Ruth and Naomi and "Davidean" friendship as the basis for their romantic friendships.{{sfn|Faderman|
While some authors, notably [[John Boswell]], have claimed that ecclesiastical practice in earlier ages blessed "same
{{quotation|Given the centrality of Boswell's
Such agreements and rituals are "same-sex" in the sense that it is two men who are involved, and they are "unions" in the sense that the two men involved are co-joined as "brothers." But that is it. There is no indication in the texts themselves that these are marriages in any sense that the word would mean to readers now, nor in any sense that the word would have meant to persons then: the formation of a common household, the sharing of everything in a permanent co-residential unit, the formation of a family unit wherein the two partners were committed, ideally, to each other, with the intent to raise children, and so on.
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Although it is difficult to state precisely what these ritualized relationships were, most historians who have studied them are fairly certain that they deal with a species of "ritualised kinship" that is covered by the term "brotherhood." (This type of "brotherhood" is similar to the ritualized agreements struck between members of the Mafia or other "men of honour" in our own society.) That explains why the texts on adelphopoiesis in the prayerbooks are embedded within sections dealing with other kinship-forming rituals, such as marriage and adoption. Giovanni Tomassia in the 1880s and Paul Koschaker in the 1930s, whose works Boswell knows and cites, had already reached this conclusion.{{r|Shaw (1994)}}}}
Historian Robert Brain has also traced these ceremonies from Pagan "blood brotherhood" ceremonies through medieval Catholic ceremonies called "[[gossipry]]" or "siblings before God", on to modern ceremonies in some Latin American countries referred to as "[[compadre|compadrazgo]]"; Brain considers the ceremonies to refer to romantic friendship.{{sfn|Brain|1976|p=75–107}}
==Reception in 1990s American gay and lesbian subculture==
Several small groups of advocates and researchers have advocated for the renewed use of the term, or the related term [[Boston marriage]], today. Several
==See also==
{{Columns-list|colwidth=22em|
* [[Asexuality]]
* [[Bromance]]
* [[Casual dating]]
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* [[Love]]
* [[Platonic love]]
* [[Romance (love)]]
* [[Romantic orientation]]
* [[Same-sex relationship]]
* [[Womance]]
* [[Work spouse]]}}
▲* [[Queerplatonic]]}}
==Notes==
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* {{cite book
|last = Crompton
|first =
|date = 2003
|title = Homosexuality and Civilization
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|date = 1998
|orig-year = Originally published 1981
|publisher = [[
|location = New York
|isbn = 0688133304
|