Nave and Choir File:Basilique ND des Victoires Messe.JPG|Transept and choir during a mass File:Notre-Dame-des-Victoires Paris Plan.gif|Plan of the church (Choir to left, transept in center, nave and chapels to right) File:Paris-Notre Dame des Victoires-104-zum Chor-2017-gje.jpg|The nave, looking toward the choir, with chapels on both sides The interior of the church is 62 meters long and 24.5 meters wide, with a height to the vaults of 15 meters. The long nave is lined with columns creating an arcade with rounded arches. It is inspired by the Church of the Jesu in Rome, bringing the congregation in the nave closer to the altar. The choir, where the clergy are seated, occupies a third of the church, and features finely carved stalls from the 17th century along both sides. The interior decoration combines elements of the classical style, including cornices decorated with sculpted roses and columns with capitals of the
Ionic order, with sculptural decoration in the Baroque style; garlands of flowers, seashells and cherubs. The altar is a 20th century work, designed by Madeleine Diener (1930-2000). It features sculpted portraits of eleven important religious figures from the 19th century whose work was connected Notre-Dame-des-Victoires, such as Emmanuel d'alcon, founder of the Congregation of Augustins of the Assumption. On top of the altar is crucifix carved from a single piece of ivory in the 17th century.
Vaults File:Basilique Notre-Dame des Victoires @ Paris (30901955740).jpg|Transept vault - a flight of angels File:Basilique Notre-Dame des Victoires @ Paris (31154718631).jpg|Decoraterd ceiling vault The ceiling vaults are decorated with very expressive sculpture. The central vault over the transept features a flight of angels, while others merge Christian symbols and decorative designs.
Chapels File:Paris arr2 Notre Dame des Victoires Marienaltar Querhaus E 0960 201310.jpg|Chapel of the Virgin File:Basilique Notre-Dame-des-Victoires Paris Chapelle de la Vierge 102018 4.jpg|Detail of Chapel of Virgin File:P1260818 Paris II ND des Victoires BR vierge de pitie rwk.jpg|Chapel of Notre Dame of the Seven Sorrows File:Basilique Notre-Dame des Victoires @ Paris (31125289012).jpg|Chapel of the Sacred Heart (1870) Chapels are located on both sides of the nave and the transept. Each chapelshas a central collateral aisle which makes it possible to pass from chapel to chapel. -The
Chapel of the Virgin is the largest chapel, located at the transept, and is dedicated to the Sacred and Immaculate Heart of the Virgin Mary. It is decorated with a statue of Mary holding the Christ child, both wearing crowns. By tradition, Special permission had to be sought from the Pope to present the figures with crowns. The statues are of plaster, and the sculptor is unknown. The chapel also displays a painting of the Annunciation by Charles-Louis Muller (1815-1892). Above the statue is the largest and most colorful stained glass window in the church, entitled "Our Lady - Refuge for Sinners." -The
Chapel of Saint Anne, the mother of the Virgin Mary, features a Bas-Relief of Saint Anne, "The Education of the Virgin", by Jacquier (1878). -The
Chapel of Saint John features a statue of Saint John made of gilded cast iron. File:P1260820 Paris II ND des Victoires chapelle detail rwk.jpg|Saint Anne with the infant Virgin Mary, Chapel of Saint Anne File:Basilique Notre-Dame des Victoires @ Paris (31154866661).jpg|Chapel of Saint John the Evangelist File:P1260823 Paris II ND des Victoires statue et fresques rwk.jpg|Chapel of
Saint Augustine File:Basilique Notre-Dame-des-Victoires, Paris September 2011 05.jpg|Gallery of
Thérèse of Lisieux - The
Chapel of the Sacred Heart features a bas-relief depicting the appearance of Christ and the Sacred Heart to Marguerite-Marie Alacoque at Paray-le-Monail in France in the 19th century. The sculpture was made by Jacquier (1870). -The
Chapel of Notre-Dame of the Seven Sorrows features a Pieta of Christ and the crucified Christ, made of the stone of Caen by Charles Gonthier (1876). - The
Chapel of Saint Augustine presents a statue of the Saint, in plaster, by Jean-Bernard Duseigneur (1849). It took the place of an earlier statue by
Jean-Baptiste Pigalle which disappeared during the French Revolution. Above this chapel is another large-scale coloured stained glass windows, "The Vow of Louis XIII", showing the King promising the construction of a church to the Virgin Mary. A more recent Saint,
Thérèse of Lisieux (1873-1897), a young French Carmelite nun of the 19th century, popularly known in English as "The Little Flower of Jesus", is honored in the Chapel of Saint Therese. == Ex votos ==