

🚩► Thanks for watching the video! If you enjoyed it and want to see more please subscribe! I spend a lot of my time making these videos and uploading so please support my channel by clicking the like button and leaving a comment! Using Ad-blocker? Support my channel by turning it off! I appreciate all the support! - Simpzyĭude skirmisher mode isn't necessary for missile units behind your infantry. 👕► Merchandise - /Simpzy 💙► Support me on Patreon - 🎮► Cheap Games G2A - 📱► Twitter - SimpzyTotalWar 💽► Discord Server - discord.gg/Y2ZHCD6 🌝► Facebook - SimpzyTotalWar/ 🚂► Steam Group - /groups/Simpzy 📷► Instagram - simpzanator 🔴► Twitch - ➕► Google+ - /+Simpzanator 🔘► The Mods - /sharedfile. Although Philip could provide a convincing argument for his occupation of certain territories in Thessaly, he proceeded to make an already difficult situation worse by committing further incursions in Thrace, concentrating on the coastal towns and cities.🔴► 500 LIKES? Welcome back to Total War Rome 2! Today we play as Alexander The Great and Macedon on the brand NEW Divide et Impera Campaign! 🔔► Subscribe - _. When Roman commissioners at Tempe ordered him to withdraw his garrisons, he began to plan for another war with Rome, which ultimately would prove disastrous for the house of Macedon, albeit not in Philip’s own lifetime. Even so, Philip’s lingering dissatisfaction with successive Roman peace settlements soon festered into resentment (4), and by 185 numerous Greek states, along with Eumenes of Pergamum, represented by his brother Athenaeus, were complaining to the senate about his seizure of other territories (5).

He then proved himself a valuable ally during the Aetolian war, following which he was allowed to keep several cities he had captured from Amynander in Athamania, along with the strategically important stronghold of Demetrias in Thessaly (3). His most valuable contribution was undoubtedly his provision of a safe passage for the Roman legions through Macedonia and Thrace, on their way to confront Antiochus in 190, in anticipation of which he was rewarded with the release of his younger son, Demetrius, who had been being held as a hostage in Rome, along with the remission of war indemnity (2). Initially, however, in spite of his defeat in 197 at Cynoscephalae in Thessaly, Philip V of Macedon had had the sagacity subsequently to support the Roman cause. During this period, not only did the generally friendly disposition of the various Greek states towards Rome begin to diminish, but the relationship between Rome and Macedon became decidedly frosty (1). In 188 Roman forces evacuated Greece for the second time in six years, and another seventeen years were to elapse before the next military intervention. Flamininus and the Assassination of the Macedonian Prince Demetrius
