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Terms of the Treaty By these arguments the Athenian envoy persuaded the Treaty with Aetolia, B. C. 189. Senate to make peace with the Aetolians. The decree therefore having been passed and confirmed by a vote of the people, the treaty was formally ratified, of which the text was as follows: "The people of the Aetolians shall in good faith maintain the empire and majesty of the people of Rome. "They shall not allow hostile forces to pass through their territory or cities against the Romans, their allies or friends; nor grant them any supplies from the public fund. "They shall have the same enemies as the people of Rome; and if the Roman people go to war with any, the Aetolian people shall do so also. "The Aetolians shall surrender to the praefectus in Corcyra, within a hundred days from the completion of the treaty, runaway slaves, and prisoners of the Romans and their allies, except such as having been taken during the war have returned to their own land and been subsequently capture
and shall deliver the money in Rome. "The Aetolians shall give the Consul forty hostages, not less than ten or more than forty years old, to remain for the six years; they shall be selected by the Romans freely, excepting only the Strategus, Hipparch, public secretary, and such as have already been hostages at Rome. "The Aetolians shall deliver such hostages in Rome; and if any one of them die, they shall give another in his place. "Cephallenia shall not be included in this treaty. "Of such territories, cities, and men as once belongedB. C. 192. to the Aetolians, and, in the consulship of Titus Quinctius and Cnaeus Domitius, or subsequently, were either captured by the Roman or voluntarily embraced their friendship, the Aetolians shall not annex any, whether city or men therein. "The city and territory of Oeniadae shall belong to the Acarnanians." The treaty having been solemnly sworn, peace was concluded, and the war in Aetolia, as is in the rest of Greece, thus came to an end. . . .