
Nike means "Victory" in Greek, and Athena was worshiped in
this form, as goddess of victory, on the Acropolis, Athens. Her temple
was the earliest Ionic temple on the Acropolis sanctuary, completed c.
420 BC during the unrest of the Peloponnesian war. Its small size was
compensated by its prominent position on a steep bastion at the south
east corner of the Acropolis, to the right of the entrance (propylaea).
There the citizens worshipped the goddess in hope of a prosperous outcome
in the long war fought on land and sea against the Spartans and their
allies. The Temple of Athena Nike was an expression of Athens' ambition
to be the leading Greek city state in the Peloponnese.

The Temple of Athena Nike is a tetrastyle (four column) Ionic structure
with a colonnaded portico at both front and rear facades (amphiprostyle),
designed by the architect Kallikrates. This building was erected on top
of the remains of an earlier sixth century temple to Athena, demolished
by the Persians in 480 B.C. The total height from the stylobate to the
acme of the pediment while the temple remained intact was a modest 11
feet. The ratio of height to diameter of the columns is 7:1, the slender
proportions creating an elegance and refinement not encountered in the
normal 9:1 or 10:1 of Ionic buildings. Constructed from white pentelic
marble, it was built in stages as war-starved funding allowed.

A cult statue of Athena Nike stood inside the small 5 m x 5 m naos.
The account by ancient writer Pausanias describes the statue as made of
wood, holding a helmet in her left hand, and a pomegranate (symbol of
fertility) in the right. Nike was originally the "winged victory"
goddess (see the winged Nike of Samothrace) The Athena Nike statue's absence
of wings led Athenians in later centuries to call it Nike Apteros (wing-less
victory), and the story arose that the statue was deprived of wings so
that it could never leave the city.

The friezes of the building's entablature were decorated on all sides
with relief sculpture in the idealized classical style of the 5th century
B.C. The north frieze depicted a battle between Greeks entailing cavalry.
The south freize showed the decisive victory over the Persians at the
battle of Plataea. The east freize showed an assembly of the gods Athena,
Zeus and Poseidon, rendering Athenian religious beliefs and reverence
for the gods bound up in the social and political climate of 5th Century
Athens.
Some time after the temple was completed, around 410 B.C a parapet was
added around it to prevent people from falling from the steep bastion.
The outside of the parapet was adorned by exquisitely carved relief sculptures
showing Nike in a variety of activities, the best-known illustrating Nike
adjusting her sandle.
After three separate restorations the small Temple of Athena Nike/Apteros
still stands on the Acropolis, together with the Erechtheum and the Parthenon,
a survivor of antiquity. The main structure, stylobate and columns are
largely intact, minus the roof and most of the typanae. Only fragments
of the sculpted frieze remain in the Acropolis museum; copies of these
are fixed in their place on the temple. |