31:
168:. Hellenistic kings generally accepted, for their own lifetimes, any treaty they had signed, on the grounds of honour. On the other hand, their heirs did not feel honour bound to accept treaties signed by their predecessors. The naval conditions of the treaty appear to have fallen into abeyance, but the other conditions held.
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and destroy
Seleucid ships as being in violation of the terms of the treaty. Octavius was killed by a Seleucid partisan named Leptines of Laodicea to avenge the destruction and the slight on the Empire's honor, and another person named Isocrates publicly suggested killing the other Roman envoys as
183:. But at this time Roman power was still indirect, and Rome depended on its capacity to ally itself to second-rank powers such as Pergamon and Rhodes. The harsh reparations weakened the Seleucid Empire, causing a shortage of money and weakening the ability of the Seleucids to manage their kingdom.
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in his possession and was limited to twelve warships for the purpose of keeping his subjects under control, but he was allowed to build more if he was attacked. Antiochus was barred from recruiting mercenaries "north of the
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would select. The hostages should be changed every third year, except the son of
Antiochus. In the future, he would maintain no elephants. The Seleucids were forced to pay an
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ratified the treaty, and installments of 1,000 talents each to be delivered to Rome annually for the next twelve years. The
Seleucids also agreed to an indemnity of 540,000
111:" (that is, from territory just ceded to Roman allies Pergamon and Rhodes) and entertaining fugitives from the same. Antiochus had to give twenty hostages, whom the
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Rome and Judea in
Transition: Hasmonean Relations with the Roman Republic and the Evolution of the High Priesthood
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313:. American University Studies Series VII: Theology and Religion 325. Peter Lang Publishing. pp. 127–130.
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Rome used the threat of a renewed war to check
Seleucid power from reasserting itself in the region. In the
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well. Strangely, the Roman Senate seems to have disavowed
Octavius's actions, and let the killer go.
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of corn. He was also forced to surrender all prisoners and deserters to his enemies, and to
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alone after occupying much of Egypt and Cyprus in 168 BC; Seleucid king
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188 BC peace treaty between the Roman
Republic and Seleucid Empire
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Judas
Maccabaeus: The Jewish Struggle Against the Seleucids
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records that as late as 162 BC, a Roman delegation led by
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to abandon Europe altogether and all of Asia west of the
74:. The treaty took place after Roman victories at the
275:. Cambridge University Press. p. 547–548.
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visited
Antioch, and used the Treaty as an excuse to
245:Judaea and Mediterranean Politics 219 to 161 B.C.E
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38:after the Treaty of Apamea, with the gains of
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171:The treaty was formalized at
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145:, the father of Eumenes.
90:The treaty, according to
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338:Polybius of Megalopolis
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203:grudgingly accepted.
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426:Asia (Roman province)
76:Battle of Thermopylae
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371:Ab Urbe Condita, 38:
366:: text of the treaty
354:Appian of Alexandria
350:: text of the treaty
416:Kingdom of Pergamon
269:Bar-Kochva, Bezalel
164:became part of the
86:Terms of the treaty
396:Roman–Seleucid War
297:Histories, Book 31
243:Gera, Dov (1998).
80:Battle of Magnesia
72:Roman–Seleucid War
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230:References
150:Asia Minor
135:Eumenes II
94:, obliged
36:Asia Minor
221:Seleucid
219:hamstring
210:Histories
143:Attalus I
117:indemnity
271:(1989).
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40:Pergamon
359:Syriaca
177:Phrygia
154:Cilicia
34:Map of
386:188 BC
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173:Apamea
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315:ISBN
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