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  1. The Treaty of Apamea was a peace treaty conducted in 188 BC between the Roman Republic and Antiochus III, ruler of the Seleucid Empire. It ended the Roman–Seleucid War.

  2. The Treaty of Apamea was a peace agreement between Rome and the Seleucid king Antiochus III in 188 BC, after Rome's victory in the Fifth Syrian War. It reduced the Seleucid kingdom to Asia Minor and imposed heavy penalties on Antiochus, who had to surrender his elephants and fleet and pay an indemnity.

  3. THE TREATY OF APAMEA (i88 B.C.): THE NAVAL CLAUSES. By A. H. McDONALD and F. W. WALBANK. 'A single example may suffice, of a note which had almost swelled into a work. The solution. passage of Livy (XxxvIII, 38) involved me in the dry and dark treatises of . .' (Gibbon, Autobiography).

  4. THE TREATY OF APAMEA (i88 B.C.) By A. H. McDONALD. There is no more likely factor of dispute in a peace treaty than its definition of an inland frontier, even when the terms of the treaty are directly known: one has not to look far for instances where a topographic reference has proved to be equivocal.

  5. Two years ago when McDonald (JRS LVII (1967), 1–8) discussed the strategic aspects of the treaty of Apamea in its ‘territorial clause’ (Polyb. XXI, 43, 5–6; Livy XXXVIII, 38, 4–5) he was concerned to define the ‘Taurus line’, in its general significance with relation to Antiochus' position in Cilicia.

  6. 8 Μαΐ 2015 · The Treaty of Apamea established φιλία (= amicitia) between the Roman people and King Antiochos III , and it is widely assumed that this treaty governed relations between Rome and the Seleucids during the subsequent half-century.

  7. A note on Livy's account of the peace treaty of Apamea between Rome and Antiochus III in 189/188 BC, and its division of Asia Minor. It discusses grammar, textual transmission, translation, and historical and geographical interpretation.

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