Title
Nike (Victory) of Samothrace
            Subject
Nike of Samothrace (Sculpture)
                     Athena (greek deity)
                     Nike (Greek deity)
                     Goddesses, Greek
                     Mythology, Greek
            Description
From the Sanctuary of the Great Gods, Samothrace. The wind-whipped costume and raised wings of this Victory indicate that she has just alighted on the prow of the stone ship that formed the original base of the statue. The work probably commemorated an important naval victory, perhaps the Rhodian triumph over the Seleucid king Antiochus III in 190 bce. The Nike (lacking its head and arms) and a fragment of its stone ship base were discovered in the ruins of the Sanctuary of the Great Gods by a French explorer in 1863 (additional fragments were discovered later). Soon after, the sculpture entered the collection of the Louvre Museum in Paris.
            Creator
Unknown artist
            Source
MRC Visual Resources Collection
            Publisher
Department of Visual Studies
                    University at Buffalo
            Date
ca. 180 BCE
                    BCE
            Contributor
Joe Easterly
            Rights
Type
statues
                     sculpture (visual work)
                    Still Image
            Identifier
VS3461166
                    vw-20110509-1
            Date Created
2011-08-18
            Date Modified
2011-08-18
            Is Part Of
Media Resource Center
                    Visual Resources Collection
                    VS001
            Extent
figure approx. 8 1 high
            Medium
marble
            Spatial Coverage
Louvre (Paris, France)
            Temporal Coverage
High Hellenistic
                     Hellenistic
                    Ancient Greek
            Audience
UB Only
            Collection
Citation
Unknown artist, “Nike (Victory) of Samothrace,” Digital Collections - University at Buffalo Libraries, accessed November 4, 2025, https://digital.lib.buffalo.edu/index.php/items/show/30596.