Venus
Related Category: Ancient Religion
in Roman religion and mythology, goddess of vegetation. Later, she became identified (3d cent. B.C.) with the Greek
Aphrodite. In imperial times she was worshiped as Venus Genetrix, mother of Aeneas; Venus Felix, the bringer of good fortune; Venus Victrix, bringer of victory; and Venus Verticordia, protector of feminine chastity. The most famous representations of Aphrodite or Venus in sculpture are the
Venus of Milo or
Melos (Louvre); the
Venus of Medici or
Medicean Aphrodite (Uffizi); the
Venus of Capua (national museum, Naples); and the
Capitoline Venus (Capitoline Mus., Rome). The
Venus of Milo is a Greek statue in marble, generally dated to the 2d or 1st cent. B.C. Found (1820) on the island of Melos, it was taken by the French ambassador to Turkey and was eventually presented by Louis XVIII to the Louvre. The
Venus of Medici belongs to the 3d cent. B.C. It is probably derived from Praxiteles'
Aphrodite of Cnidus, which was destroyed.