Sunday, 17 May 2026

Folly

 

Folly

The best plan is to profit by the folly of others.

Pliny the Elder (23/4 AD-79 AD)

 

The Pantheon at Stourhead was built in 1754-1754. It was inspired by the Pantheon in Rome.

Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons


Folly, from the French folie, is a synonym for foolishness, often involving poor judgement, or recklessness.

Was it folly that led to the fashion for constructing decorative but apparently purposeless buildings?

 Follies were frequently built in the grand gardens of English and French estates.

Some ancient estates had genuine ruins in their grounds, but others designed their own, as a romantic expression.

The fashion for follies began in the 16th century, and by the 18th century they were extremely popular. They took many forms, including exotic temples, ruined castles, and other unexpected manifestations. Some, in France for example, were romantic cottages and mills. Others found their inspiration in landscape paintings.

Follies are found across the world, but they are particularly numerous in the United Kingdom, which has thousands. However, England is known as the country in which more were built than anywhere else.

Famine Follies refers to the works built during the 1845-1849 Great Famine of Ireland. In an effort to provide relief for desperately impoverished people, projects were devised that would not take work away from existing workers. Famine follies included deliberately pointless structures like roads which went nowhere, piers built in bogs, and arches leading to nothing.

 

 

4 comments:

  1. While the Famine Follies might appear useless, at the time it did get people working that might otherwise have sat at home brooding and possibly suffering mentally because of that brooding and feeling useless. Some follies, like gazebos etc might even be useful for things like garden parties.

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  2. I learned about follies by watching British mysteries.

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  3. This is making me think about our trip to Europe this summer...will there be enough jet fuel to return home...what folly awaits us fools for planning a trip at the same time the orange shitpile started a war to distract from his illegal behaviour. Yes...I'm a bit bitter. Sorry.

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  4. I never heard of the famine follies. Sounds like a pointless version of the later wpa, of the Roosevelt administration, which at least provided useful work to save people from starvation.

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