Antiochus is now eager to negotiate on …

Years: 190BCE - 190BCE

Antiochus is now eager to negotiate on the basis of Rome's previous demands, but the Romans now insist that he first evacuate the region west of the Taurus Mountains.

When he refuses, Antiochus is decisively defeated in winter 190-189 in the Battle of Magnesia near Mt. Sipylus (not far from Sardis), where he fights with a heterogeneous army of seventy thousand men against an army of thirty thousand Romans and their Pergamene allies.

The military skill of Eumenes II of Pergamon contribute substantially to the victory.

Scipio Africanus and his brother have fought Rome's victorious war, but Flamininus has remained active in diplomacy.

One of the terms demanded of Antiochus by the Romans is that Hannibal should be surrendered.

Accounts of Hannibal's subsequent actions vary: either he flees via Crete to the court of King Prusias of Bithynia, or he joins the rebel forces in Armenia, where Artaxias and Zariadres, Antiochus' satraps, have revolted against Seleucid rule.

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