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Second Macedonian War
Part of Macedonian Wars
Date 200 BC - 196 BC
Location Macedon and Illyria
Result Roman victory
Casus belli Competing for control of Greece,

Philip's decision to support Hannibal

Combatants
Roman Republic,

with Eumenes II (Pergamon) and Rhodes

Macedon
Commanders
Titus Flamininus Philip V of Macedon

The Second Macedonian War (200–-196 BC) was fought between Rome, allied with Pergamum and Rhodes, and Philip V of Macedon.

Philip had long been interested in the Greek city states, but as these states were allied with Rome he long did not dare attack them. Instead, he began to take control over parts of Illyria. Rome responded by an ultimatum to Philip, threatening with war, and Philip withdrew his forces.

Macedon now started expanding on territory claimed by the Greek city states. These states called for help to their ally Rome, and Rome responded by giving Philip an ultimatum: he had to accept Roman rule over Macedon, in essence making Macedon a Roman province. Philip refused, and the Second Macedonian War began.

The decisive battle was at Cynoscephalae in Thessaly in 197 BC, when the legions of Titus Flamininus defeated Philip's Macedonian phalanx. Macedonian control of Greece was shattered, and at the Isthmian Games in Corinth in 196 BC, Flamininus proclaimed the freedom of Greece, although in fact Greece had now become a Roman protectorate in all but name.

Asides from the control over Greece, another reason for the war was that Rome saw Philip as a traitor: Philip had supported Hannibal of Carthage, which had led to the First Macedonian War.

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