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Events
By place
Greece
★ The leader of the
Achaean League,
Philopoemen, enters northern
Laconia with his army and a group of
Spartan exiles. His army demolishes the wall that the former
tyrant of
Sparta,
Nabis, has built around Sparta. Philopoemen then restores Spartan citizenship to the exiles and abolishes Spartan law, introducing
Achaean law in its place. Sparta's role as a major power in
Greece ends, while the
Achaean League becomes the dominant power throughout the
Peloponnese.
Roman Republic
★ The continuing quarrels among the Greek cities and leagues increases the conviction in
Rome that there will be no peace in Greece until Rome takes full control.
★ Through the peace
treaty of Apamea (in
Phrygia), the Romans force the
Seleucid king,
Antiochus III, to surrender all his Greek and
Anatolian possessions as far east as the
Taurus Mountains, to pay 15,000
talents over a period of 12 years and to surrender to Rome the former
Carthaginian general
Hannibal, his elephants and his fleet, and furnish hostages, including the king's eldest son,
Demetrius. Rome is now the master of the eastern
Mediterranean while Antiochus III's empire is reduced to
Syria,
Mesopotamia, and western
Iran.
Anatolia
★
Hannibal flees via
Crete to the court of King
Prusias I of Bithynia who is engaged in warfare with Rome's ally, King
Eumenes II of
Pergamum.
★ Following the peace of
Apamea, Eumenes II receives the provinces of
Phrygia,
Lydia,
Lycia,
Pisidia, and
Pamphylia from his Roman allies, as the Romans have no desire to actually administer territory in Hellenistic Anatolia but want to see a strong, friendly state in
Anatolia as a buffer zone against any possible
Seleucid expansion in the future.
Births
★
Jing of Han, emperor of the
Chinese Han Dynasty, who will rule from
156 BC. During his reign, he will fight to curtail of power of the Chinese feudal princes (d.
141 BC)
Deaths
★
Hui of Han, the second emperor of the Chinese
Han Dynasty, who has ruled from
195 BC (b.
210 BC)