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For the later, and better-known battle fought here, see Battle of Cynoscephalae.
Battle of Cynoscephalae (See more detailed article)
After the Battle of Cynoscephalae, the islands passed to Rhodes and then to the Romans.
After his victory at Battle of Cynoscephalae, Flaminius proclaimed the "liberation" of Greece.
In 197, however, Philip was defeated in the Battle of Cynoscephalae by the Romans and was forced to surrender.
Pelopidas, Theban statesman (killed in the Battle of Cynoscephalae in Thessaly)
In 197 BC the Romans decisively defeated Philip at the Battle of Cynoscephalae, and he sued for peace.
In his description of the Battle of Cynoscephalae, Polybius informs us of a unit he calls Peltasts, which he clearly places among the phalanx.
Attalus was taken back to Pergamon, where he died around the time of the Battle of Cynoscephalae, which brought about the end of the Second Macedonian War.
In the Battle of Cynoscephalae during the Second Macedonian War three years later, Cretan mercenary archers fought for both the Romans and the Macedonians.
Using a flanking maneuver, Flaminius managed to dislodge Philip and chase him into Thessaly, where in 197 BC the two sides met at the Battle of Cynoscephalae.
In 197 BC he defeated Philip at the Battle of Cynoscephalae in Thessaly, the Roman legions making the Macedonian phalanx obsolete in the process.
Philip's allies in Greece deserted him and in 197 BC he was decisively defeated at the Battle of Cynoscephalae by the Roman proconsul Titus Quinctius Flamininus.
Polybius mentions a hypaspist being sent by Philip V of Macedon, after his defeat at the Battle of Cynoscephalae in 197 BC, to Larisa to burn state papers.
In 364 BC, the Thebans defeated the army of Alexander of Pherae in the Battle of Cynoscephalae, located in south-eastern Thessaly in northern Greece.
The Aetolians continued to fight on the side of the Romans even in the Battle of Cynoscephalae (196 BC), ignoring the great dangers looming for Greece as a result of this alliance.
The Second Macedonian War lasted until 196 BC, and it effectively ended when the Romans and their allies, including the Aetolian League, defeated Philip at the Battle of Cynoscephalae.
These battles have so far included the Battle of Gaugamela, the Battle of the Sambre the Battle of Cynoscephalae Kadesh, Zama and the Battle of Platea.
Just prior to the Battle of Cynoscephalae, Flamininus learned of the decision of Acarnania to join up with Philip V of Macedon, and so he set sail to blockade the city of Leucas.
After campaigns in Macedonia in 199 BC and Thessaly in 198 BC, Philip and his Macedonian forces were decisively defeated at the Battle of Cynoscephalae in 197 BC.
At the Battle of Cynoscephalae (364 BC), the Theban forces of Pelopidas fought against the Thessalian troops of Alexander of Pherae in a battle in which Pelopidas was killed; nevertheless, the Thebans won.
After the Battle of Cynoscephalae in 197 BC, Cycliadas was sent with Demosthenes and Limnaeus as ambassador from Philip to Flamininus, who granted the king a truce of 15 days with a view to the arrangement of a permanent peace.
One depicts the Battle of Cynoscephalae, in 197 B.C., when a Roman legion, using short swords, spears and elephants defeated a Macedonian phalanx in northern Greece, establishing the supremacy of Roman rule in that part of the ancient world.
Alexander was greatly injured in the Battle of Cynoscephalae (194 BC) in which Antiochus was defeated by the Romans, and in this state he carried the news of the defeat to his kin, who was staying at Thronium, on the Maliac Gulf.
The Roman general Titus Quinctius Flamininus not only soundly defeated Philip's army in the Battle of Cynoscephalae in 197 BC, but also brought further hope to the Greeks when he said that an autonomous Greece and Greek cities in Anatolia was what Rome desired.