Listed 3 sub titles with search on: Information about the place for destination: "KYNOS KEFALES Ancient city THESSALIA".
Total results on 24/4/2001: 12 for Cynoscephalae, 4 for Kynoskephalai.
(Kunos Kephalai, i. e. "Dogs' Heads)." Two hills near Scotussa in Thessaly,
where the Thebans defeated the Pheraeans (B.C. 364) and where Flamininus gained
his celebrated victory over Philip of Macedonia, B.C. 197.
Kunos kephalai. The names of two ranges of hills, so called from their supposed resemblance to the heads of dogs. 1. In Thessaly, a little to the south of Scotussa, in whose territory they were situated. They are described by Polybius (xviii. 5) as rugged, broken, and of considerable height; and are memorable as the scene of two battles: one fought, in B.C. 364, between the Thebans and Alexander of Pherae, in which Pelopidas was slain; and the other, of still greater celebrity, fought in B.C. 197, in which the last Philip of Macedon was defeated by the Roman consul Flamininus.
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited June 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
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