The Greek Army under
Demetrios Ypsilantis, which for the first time trained to fight as a regular European army rather than as guerilla bands, awaited Aslan Bey's forces at
Petra, a town at a narrow passage in
Boeotia between
Livadeia and
Thebes in order to dispute their passage. On September 12 1829, the two armies engaged in battle. The Greeks, after a hail of gunfire, charged with swords and drove the
Ottoman army into a disorderly retreat. The rest of the Ottoman army, now in danger of being surrounded, also retreated. The Ottoman army was unable to advance and, as a result, concluded a capitulation on 25 September 1829. For both sides the casualties were relatively light. The Greeks suffered three dead and twelve wounded, while the Ottomans lost about one hundred dead. ==Aftermath==