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The cluster includes all the forms of the country.
The cluster includes the following incarnations of the same nation:
Acarnanian League
Acarnanian League (Roman Client)
Establishment
January 424 BC: In 425 BC, the army of Acarnania and the Athenians of Naupatto led an expedition against the city of Anactorio and managed to conquer it following a betrayal. They expelled the Corinthians and the city was occupied by the Acarnanians.
Chronology
Interactive Chronologies with maps are available in the section Changes Navigation
Was an ancient Greek war fought between Athens and Sparta and their respective allies for the hegemony of the Greek world.
Creation of the Acarnanian League (a league of ancient Greece).
January 399 BC: Limnaia joined the Acarnanian League when it was founded in the 5th century BC. The league was a loose confederation of Acarnanian cities.
January 399 BC: Phara joined the Acarnanian League when it was founded in the 5th century BC. The league was a loose confederation of Acarnanian cities.
January 399 BC: Argos (Akarnania) joined the Acarnanian League when it was founded in the 5th century BC. The league was a loose confederation of Acarnanian cities.
January 399 BC: Alyzeia joined the Acarnanian League when it was founded in the 5th century BC. The league was a loose confederation of Acarnanian cities.
January 399 BC: Astakos (Akarnania) joined the Acarnanian League when it was founded in the 5th century BC. The league was a loose confederation of Acarnanian cities.
January 399 BC: Derion joined the Acarnanian League when it was founded in the 5th century BC. The league was a loose confederation of Acarnanian cities.
January 399 BC: Echinos (Akarnania) joined the Acarnanian League when it was founded in the 5th century BC. The league was a loose confederation of Acarnanian cities.
January 399 BC: Euripos joined the Acarnanian League when it was founded in the 5th century BC. The league was a loose confederation of Acarnanian cities.
January 399 BC: Koronta joined the Acarnanian League when it was founded in the 5th century BC. The league was a loose confederation of Acarnanian cities.
January 399 BC: Medion joined the Acarnanian League when it was founded in the 5th century BC. The league was a loose confederation of Acarnanian cities.
January 399 BC: Palairos joined the Acarnanian League when it was founded in the 5th century BC. The league was a loose confederation of Acarnanian cities.
January 399 BC: Paleis joined the Acarnanian League when it was founded in the 5th century BC. The league was a loose confederation of Acarnanian cities.
January 399 BC: Sollion joined the Acarnanian League when it was founded in the 5th century BC. The league was a loose confederation of Acarnanian cities.
January 399 BC: Thyrreion joined the Acarnanian League when it was founded in the 5th century BC. The league was a loose confederation of Acarnanian cities.
January 399 BC: Torybeia joined the Acarnanian League when it was founded in the 5th century BC. The league was a loose confederation of Acarnanian cities.
Was a conflict in ancient Greece which pitted Sparta against a coalition of city-states comprising Thebes, Athens, Corinth and Argos, backed by the Achaemenid Empire.
January 388 BC: Spartan King Agesilaus II campaigned successfully in Acarnania.
February 388 BC: End of the Spartan military campaign in Acarnania.
Were a series of conflicts that were fought between the generals of Alexander the Great, known as the Diadochi, over who would rule his empire following his death.
4.1.Third War of the Diadochi
Was a war between Macedonian Generals that saw Ptolemy, Lysimachus and Cassander fight against Antigonus.
January 313 BC: In 314 BC Cassander arrived in Acarnania and reorganized the League on a truly federal basis. The island of Leucas joined the League soon after.
Were a seris of conflicts between the Roman Republic and Antigonid Macedonia over control of Greece and the eastern Mediterranean Basin. .
5.1.First Macedonian War
Was a war fought by Rome, allied (after 211 BC) with the Aetolian League and Attalus I of Pergamon, against Philip V of Macedon, contemporaneously with the Second Punic War (218-201 BC) against Carthage. There were no decisive engagements, and the war ended in a stalemate.
January 204 BC: In the First Macedonian War (214-205 BC), Oiniadai was lost again.
5.1.1.Campaign of Laevinus in Greece
Was a Roman military campaign in Greece led by Marcus Valerius Laevinus during the first Macedonian War.
January 209 BC: The Romans conquered three cities of Acarania: Eniade, Nasos and Acarnanus, which he returned to the Aetolians.
January 204 BC: After another season of fighting, in 206 BC, the members of the Aetolian League surrendered and, without the consent of Rome, signed a separate peace on the terms imposed on them by Philip of Macedon. With no more allies in all of Greece, but having nonetheless achieved their objective of preventing Philip from helping Hannibal, the Romans were now willing to sign peace. A treaty was signed at Phoenix in 205 BC, the so-called Peace of Phoenix, thus ending the First Macedonian War.
5.2.Third Macedonian War
Was a war fought by Rome against Antigonid Macedonia. The war was won by Rome, and Macedonia was divided in four client states of Rome.
January 167 BC: Despite their steadfast loyalty to Rome, the League lost Leucas after the Third Macedonian War (171-168 BC), as it became an autonomous state.
Was a military conflict between two coalitions led by the Roman Republic and the Seleucid Empire. The fighting ended with a clear Roman victory. In the Treaty of Apamea, the Seleucids were forced to give up Asia Minor, which fell to Roman allies.
January 191 BC: Seleucid Invasion of Greece up to the Thermopylae.
6.1.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.
January 187 BC: Oiniadai was returned to Acarnania after the Roman-Seleucid War.
January 187 BC: The Romans sent an army to Greece which defeated Antiochus' army at Thermopylae. This defeat proved crushing, and the Seleucids were forced to retreat from Greece.
January 269 BC: After the death of Pyrrhus, King of Epirus, in around 270 BC, the Acarnanians and Aetolians reached a peace agreement. They established the Acheloos River as their shared border.
January 216 BC: During the Social War (220-217 BC), the Acarnanians, led by their general Dorimachos, successfully regained control of Phoitia and Oiniadai from the Aetolian League.
January 196 BC: In the Second Macedonian War (200-197 BC) the Acarnanians were forced to capitulate to the Roman Republic.
September 31 BC: It was only after the Battle of Actium in 31 BC that the Acarnanian League (Roman Client) was incorporated into the Roman province of Achaea.
Disestablishment
September 31 BC: It was only after the Battle of Actium in 31 BC that the Acarnanian League (Roman Client) was incorporated into the Roman province of Achaea.
Selected Sources
Piganiol, A. (1989): Le conquiste dei romani, Milan (Italy), p. 237
Titus Livius: Ab Urbe Condita,XXVI, 24.15-16