The Nike of Megara was found in
Megara a town due west of
Athens. There are two versions of the discovery of the statue. According to one, it was found on the beach at Nisaea in 1830; according to the other, it was found in 1820, at the outset of the
Greek War of Independence, together with some proxeny decrees in the north-west of the Karia hill. Archival documents support the early date and that the finder was the Corinthian man named Theochares Rentis. The statue probably originally belonged to the Olympieion of Megara. Two more colossal female statues were also found alongside it. In June 1827, Rentis's widow sold all three statues to
Carl Wilhelm von Heideck, agent of King Ludwig I of Bavaria, just a month after the Provision of the Third National Assembly at
Troezen that banned the sale and export of antiquities. Heideck thus was not allowed to export the three statues. One of them was eventually sold by some Greeks the following month to an American captain, who donated it to the Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia where it was destroyed in 1937. The second statue was moved to the National Museum on the island of
Aegina where it was put in record and given an accession number in the museum's catalogue of antiquities. It has been identified with a colossal female statue in the museum of Aegina (inv. no. 2253), though this identification has been met with doubt (but not dismissal). This meant that the Nike alone stayed at Megara, until 1840 when it was transferred to the “Central Public Museum for the antiquities” that had been housed since 1835 in the
Temple of Hephaestus in the agora of Athens, incorrectly then identified as the Theseum. The work was then transported to a new location, the National Archaeological Museum, in 1889. It has never been exhibited to the public. In 2018, after more than a hundred years that the statue had spent in storage, the municipality of Megara asked the NAMA for the return of the Nike so it might be displayed in the Archaeological Museum of Megara; the museum rejected the offer, and claimed that their intention was to exhibit the Nike in the central hall of the National Archaeological Museum for the bicentennial anniversary of Greek independence in 2021; this however never happened, and the
Nike of Megara remains in storage. The museum of Megara displays a copy of an 1847 engraving of it instead. == Description ==