Jeff Steiner's Americans in France.
Resource for people that would like to live or travel in France.

Attractions

Culture

Daily Life

Driving

Forum

Links

Moving Planner

Q & A

Reading List

Tidbits

Travel Planner

Videos

Expat Store
Currency
Services

Driver's License

Events

Food

Insurance

Learn French

Tax Services

Telephony



Photo TidbitsWinged Victory of Samothrace

By Jim and Emmy Humberd

Winged Victory of Samothrace

The statue, now known as Winged Victory, stands at the head of the great staircase leading to the upper galleries of The Louvre in Paris. In 1863 the French consul at Adrianople found 118 fragments of marble on the Greek island of Samothrace, overlooking the Aegean sea. The fragments were sent to Paris, reconstructed at the Louvre, and is now one of the most famous statues ever found. It's funny that the fragments were all parts of the body, no head was ever found.

It is thought the statue honored warriors who fought a naval battle in about 200 B.C., but no reference even hazards a guess as to the date it was carved. An amazing feat of artistry, whatever the year, or should that be, whatever the century.

Books by Jim and Emmy Humberd:
Invitation to France
Invitation to Germany
Invitation to Italy

Related Links:
Winged Victory of Samothrace
Winged Victory

Hotels near the Louvre



French Video Immersion

Sign-up for the FREE Americans in France newsletter.
Just type in your e-mail address and click 'Subscribe'.



HomeBack

ContactNewletter

Classifieds

Documents

Support

Advertise


Travel Store

Apartments

Apps

Auto Rentals

B&B's

Hotels

Phone Card

Sightseeing

SIM Card

Workshops

Terms &
Conditions

This site
uses Cookies!

Terms of Service

Other

Follow me
on Twitter.

Facebook Page

RSS Feed