The Seleucid fleet sailed via
Imbros and
Skiathos, arriving at Demetrias where Antiochus' army disembarked. Antiochus traveled to
Lamia where he participated in the council of the Aetolians, who declared him their for a year. The
Achaean League declared war on the Seleucids and Aetolians, with the Romans following suit in November 192 BC. Antiochus forced
Chalcis to open its gates to him and raided a Roman camp at
Delium, killing 250 soldiers. The surrender of the Chalcidians led the rest of
Euboea to follow its example. The Seleucids transformed the city into their base of operations, effectively controlling the Greek eastern coast. Antiochus then shifted his attention towards rebuilding his alliance with Philip V of Macedon, which had been shattered after the latter was decisively defeated by the Romans at the 197 BC
Battle of Cynoscephalae. Philip expected that the Romans would emerge victorious in the conflict and counted on territorial rewards as well as the writing off of
war reparations that he owed; while the Seleucids could provide neither, so Antiochus' overtures were rejected and Philip aligned himself with the Romans. Antiochus likewise approached
Athens, the
Athamanians, the
Boeotian League as well as city states in
Acarnania and
Epirus with offers of alliance. Despite the reassurances of the Aetolians, most of the Greek states remained neutral, fearing future reprisals. Only
Elis, the Boeotian League and
Amynander of Athamania declared their allegiance to Antiochus, the later being promised the Macedonian throne for his brother in law
Philip of Megalopolis. In December 192, the Seleucids and their Aetolian allies launched a campaign against the
Thessalian League from the south, while the Athamanian army attacked from the west. Antiochus rapidly seized much of southern
Thessaly, withdrawing to his winter quarters after running out of supplies. In early March 191 BC, the Seleucids invaded Acarnania, aiming at depriving the Roman fleet of ports on the western coast of Greece. After a brief campaign, Antiochus seized control of half of the
Acarnanian League and gained the allegiance of its Klytos. At the same time
Roman consul Manius Acilius Glabrio crossed from
Brundisium to
Illyria with an army of 20,000 infantry, 2,000 cavalry and 15 war elephants. Glabrio's army brought the total of the Roman and allied forces in Greece to 36,000 men, significantly outnumbering that of the Seleucids and their allies. In the meantime, Philip V and Roman
propraetor Baebius launched parallel offensives in Thessaly and Athamania, quickly erasing Seleucid gains in the region. Glabrio and Philip's armies united at
Limnaion before joining with that of Baebius at Pellina. Upon being alerted about the enemy's advance into Thessaly and the disintegration of the Athamanian army, Antiochus returned to Chalcis; gathering his scattered garrisons along the way. , and the coast line at the time of the map (1876). Thermopylae pass is between Alpeni and
Anthela. Antiochus marched to Lamia with his entire force of 12,000 infantry, 500 cavalry and 16 war elephants, simultaneously ordering the Aetolians to mobilize there. Only 4,000 men answered his call, as the Aetolians feared that their homeland was on the brink of invasion. Fearing encirclement by a numerically superior force, the Seleucids withdrew to the
Thermopylae pass. The Aetolian force was split into two armies of equal strength, garrisoning the cities of
Hypata and
Heraclea in Trachis; which blocked the roads to Aetolia and Thermopylae respectively. Antiochus' troops took hold of the narrowest section of the Thermopylae pass some wide located at its eastern end. Augmenting the preexisting defensive wall which extended up the hill to its south, ending at an inaccessible cliff. The ditch and earthworks situated in front of the wall stretched to the
Malian Gulf, the slopes on the hills overlooking it were relatively gradual, allowing the Seleucids to man them with projectile throwers. Special towers were built to house , Hellenistic era artillery. Glabrio ravaged the countryside of Hypata and Heraclea, before camping at the "
hot gates", half way through the pass. ==Battle==