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TITUS QUINCTIUS FLAMININUS (c. 228–174 B.C.) , See also: Roman general and statesman
.
He began his public See also: life as a military tribune under M
.
See also: Claudius See also: Marcellus, the conqueror of Syracuse
.
In 199 he was quaestor, and the next See also: year, passing over the See also: regular stages of See also: aedile and praetor, he obtained the consulship
.
Flamininus was one of the first and most successful of the rising school of Roman statesmen, the opponents of the narrow patriotism of which See also: Cato was the type, the disciples of See also: Greek culture, and the See also: advocates of a wide imperial policy
.
His winning See also: manners, his polished address, his knowledge of men, his See also: personal fascination, and his intimate knowledge of Greek, all marked him out as the fittest representative of See also: Rome in the See also: East
.
Accordingly, the province of See also: Macedonia, and the conduct of the war with See also: Philip V. of Macedon, in which, after two years, Rome had as yet gained little
See also: advantage, were assigned to him
.
Flamininus modified both the policy and tactics of his predecessors
.
After an unsuccessful attempt to come to terms, he drove the Macedonians from the valley of the Aous by skilfully turning an impregnable' position
.
Having thus practically made himself master of Macedonia, he proceeded to See also: Greece, where Philip still had See also: allies and supporters
.
The Achaean See also: League (q.v.) at once deserted the cause of Macedonia, and Nabis, the See also: tyrant of See also: Sparta, entered into an See also: alliance with Rome; See also: Acarnania and Bceotia submitted in less than a year, and, with the exception of the See also: great fortresses, Flamininus had the whole of Greece under his control
.
The demand of the Greeks for the expulsion of Macedonian garrisons from Demetrias, See also: Chalcis and See also: Corinth, as the only guarantee for the freedom of Greece, was refused, and negotiations were broken off
.
Hostilities were renewed in the spring of 197, and Flamininus took theSee also: field supported by nearly the whole of Greece
.
At Cynoscephalae the Macedonian phalanx and the Roman
See also: legion for the first See also: time met in open fight, and the See also: day decided which nation was to be master of Greece and perhaps of the See also: world
.
It was a victory of See also: superior tactics
.
The See also: left wing of the Roman army was retiring in confusion before the Macedonian right led by Philip in See also: person, when Flamininus, leaving them to their See also: fate, boldly charged the left wing under See also: Nicanor, which was forming on the heights
.
Before the left wing had time to See also: form, Flamininus was upon them, and a See also: massacre rather than a fight ensued
.
This defeat was turned into a general rout by a nameless tribune, who collected twenty companies and charged in the See also: rear the victorious Macedonian phalanx, which in its pursuit had left the Roman right far behind
.
Macedonia was now at the mercy of Rome, but Flamininus contented himself with his previous demands
.
Philip lost all his See also: foreign possessions, but retained his Macedonian See also: kingdom almost entire
.
He was required to reduce his army, to give up all his decked See also: ships except five, and to pay an indemnity of See also: loot) talents (£244,000)
.
Ten commissioners arrived from Rome to regulate the final terms of See also: peace, and at the Isthmian See also: games a herald proclaimed to the assembled crowds that " the Roman See also: people, and T
.
Quinctius their general, having conquered See also: King Philip and the Macedonians, declare all the Greek states which had been subject to the king henceforward
See also: free and See also: independent." Flamininus's last See also: act before returning home was characteristic
.
Of the See also: Achaeans, who vied with one another in showering upon him honours and rewards, he asked but one personal favour, the redemption of the See also: Italian captives who had been sold as slaves in Greece during the Hannibalic War
.
These, to the number of 1200, were presented to him on the See also: eve of his departure (spring, 194), and formed the chief See also: ornament of his See also: triumph
.
In 192, on the rupture between the See also: Romans and See also: Antiochus III. the Great, Flamininus returned to Greece, this time as the See also: civil representative of Rome
.
His personal influence and skilful See also: diplomacy secured the wavering Achaean states, cemented the alliance with Philip, and contributed mainly to the Roman
victory at Thermopylae (191)
.
In 183 he undertook an See also: embassy to Prusias, king of See also: Bithynia, to induce him to deliver up Hannibal, who forestalled his fate by taking See also: poison
.
Nothing more is known of Flamininus, except that, according to Plutarch, his end was peaceful and happy
.
There seems no doubt that Flamininus was actuated by a genuine love of Greece and its people
.
To attribute to him a Machiavellian policy, which foresaw the overthrow of Corinth fifty years later and the conversion of See also: Achaea into a Roman province, is absurd and disingenuous
.
There is more force in the See also: charge that his Hellenic sympathies prevented him from seeing the innate weakness and mutual jealousies of the Greek states of that See also: period, whose only hope of peace and safety See also: lay in submitting to the See also: protectorate of the Roman republic
.
But if the event proved that the liberation of Greece was a See also: political See also: mistake, it was a See also: noble and generous mistake, and reflects nothing but honour on the name of Flamininus, " the liberator of the Greeks."
His life has been written by Plutarch, and in See also: modern times by F
.
D
.
Gerlach (1871); see also See also: Mommsen, Hist. of Rome (Eng. tr.), bk. iii. chs
.
8, 9
.
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