of the previous year. At length the Roman general
was helped out of his perplexity by the treachery of
some men of rank among the Epirots—who
were otherwise well disposed to Macedonia—and
especially of Charops. They conducted a Roman
corps of 4000 infantry and 300 cavalry by mountain
paths to the heights above the Macedonian camp; and,
when the consul attacked the enemy’s army in
front, the advance of that Roman division, unexpectedly
descending from the mountains commanding the position,
decided the battle. Philip lost his camp and
entrenchments and nearly 2000 men, and hastily retreated
to the pass of Tempe, the gate of Macedonia proper.
He gave up everything which he had held except the
fortresses; the Thessalian towns, which he could not
defend, he himself destroyed; Pherae alone closed
its gates against him and thereby escaped destruction.
The Epirots, induced partly by these successes of
the Roman arms, partly by the judicious moderation
of Flamininus, were the first to secede from the Macedonian
alliance. On the first accounts of the Roman
victory the Athamanes and Aetolians immediately invaded
Thessaly, and the Romans soon followed; the open country
was easily overrun, but the strong towns, which were
friendly to Macedonia and received support from Philip,
fell only after a brave resistance or withstood even
the superior foe—especially Atrax on the
left bank of the Peneius, where the phalanx stood
in the breach as a substitute for the wall.
Except these Thessalian fortresses and the territory
of the faithful Acarnanians, all northern Greece was
thus in the hands of the coalition.
The Achaeans Enter into Alliance with Rome
The south, on the other hand, was still in the main
retained under the power of Macedonia by the fortresses
of Chalcis and Corinth, which maintained communication
with each other through the territory of the Boeotians
who were friendly to the Macedonians, and by the Achaean
neutrality; and as it was too late to advance into
Macedonia this year, Flamininus resolved to direct
his land army and fleet in the first place against
Corinth and the Achaeans. The fleet, which had
again been joined by the Rhodian and Pergamene ships,
had hitherto been employed in the capture and pillage
of two of the smaller towns in Euboea, Eretria and
Carystus; both however, as well as Oreus, were thereafter
abandoned, and reoccupied by Philocles the Macedonian
commandant of Chalcis. The united fleet proceeded
thence to Cenchreae, the eastern port of Corinth,
to threaten that strong fortress. On the other
side Flamininus advanced into Phocis and occupied
the country, in which Elatea alone sustained a somewhat
protracted siege: this district, and Anticyra
in particular on the Corinthian gulf, were chosen
as winter quarters. The Achaeans, who thus saw
on the one hand the Roman legions approaching and on
the other the Roman fleet already on their own coast,
abandoned their morally honourable, but politically