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197 BC

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Calendar year
Years
Millennium
1st millennium BC
Centuries
Decades
Years
197 BC by topic
Politics
Categories
197 BC in various calendars
Gregorian calendar 197 BC
CXCVII BC
Ab urbe condita 557
Ancient Egypt era XXXIII dynasty, 127
- Pharaoh Ptolemy V Epiphanes, 7
Ancient Greek Olympiad (summer) 145th Olympiad, year 4
Assyrian calendar 4554
Balinese saka calendar N/A
Bengali calendar −790 – −789
Berber calendar 754
Buddhist calendar 348
Burmese calendar −834
Byzantine calendar 5312–5313
Chinese calendar 癸卯年 (Water Rabbit)
2501 or 2294
    — to —
甲辰年 (Wood Dragon)
2502 or 2295
Coptic calendar −480 – −479
Discordian calendar 970
Ethiopian calendar −204 – −203
Hebrew calendar 3564–3565
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat −140 – −139
 - Shaka Samvat N/A
 - Kali Yuga 2904–2905
Holocene calendar 9804
Iranian calendar 818 BP – 817 BP
Islamic calendar 843 BH – 842 BH
Javanese calendar N/A
Julian calendar N/A
Korean calendar 2137
Minguo calendar 2108 before ROC
民前2108年
Nanakshahi calendar −1664
Seleucid era 115/116 AG
Thai solar calendar 346–347
Tibetan calendar ཆུ་མོ་ཡོས་ལོ་
(female Water-Hare)
−70 or −451 or −1223
    — to —
ཤིང་ཕོ་འབྲུག་ལོ་
(male Wood-Dragon)
−69 or −450 or −1222

Year 197 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. At the time it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Cethegus and Rufus (or, less frequently, year 557 Ab urbe condita ). The denomination 197 BC for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.

Events

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By place

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Asia Minor

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Egypt

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Greece

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  • The Spartan ruler, Nabis, acquires the important city of Argos from Philip V of Macedon, as the price of his alliance with the Macedonians. Nabis then defects to the Romans in the expectation of being able to hold on to his conquest.
  • The Battle of Cynoscephalae in Thessaly gives a Roman army under proconsul Titus Quinctius Flamininus a decisive victory over Philip V of Macedon. In the Treaty of Tempe, the terms of the peace proposed by the Roman general and adopted by the Roman Senate specify that Philip V can retain his throne and control of Macedonia, but he has to abandon all the Greek cities he has conquered. Philip also has to provide to the Romans 1,000 talents as indemnity, surrender most of his fleet and provide hostages, including his younger son, Demetrius, who is to be held in Rome. The Aetolians propose that Philip V be ejected from his throne but Flamininus opposes this.
  • The volcanic island of Hiera emerges from under the sea near Thera.

Hispania

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China

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Deaths

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References

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