(192188 BC) Manius Acilius Glabrio was born in the 3rd century BC to a
plebeian family. He was the first in his family to attain the
consulship, making him a "
new man" (). He served as
tribune of the plebs in 201, as
plebeian aedile in 197, and as
praetor peregrinus in 196. During his praetorship, he suppressed a
slave revolt in
Etruria. Glabrio was
elected consul for with
Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica. A series of disputes had led the
Aetolian League to invite the
Seleucid emperor Antiochus III to liberate, in their framing, Greece from Roman domination; this was a view little shared by other Greeks, who after the
Second Macedonian War had largely been left to their own affairs. From a decree of the senate, the consuls brought the question of
war with Antiochus to the people and after its passage Glabrio drew its command. After landing in Thessaly, Glabrio then defeated Antiochus at
Thermopylae, compelling Antiochus to withdraw across the
Aegean to
Ephesus. He then moved against the
city-states of the
Aetolian League who had resisted Roman hegemony. He captured
Heraclea by the early summer, attempted peace negotiations, and thenwhen those failedbesieged
Naupactus. In September, the former consul
Titus Quinctius Flamininusthe chief victor of the Second Macedonian Warwas approached to seek a truce, allowing the Aetolians to send embassies to Rome to negotiate a peace agreement. Glabrio accepted the offer, lifted the siege, and sent his own envoys back to Rome for the discussions. The negotiations fell through and the war continued. Glabrio was prorogued as a
proconsul for the next year to continue military operations. While in Greece, he provided gifts to
Delphi and
its oracle. Considered by the Romans to have dealt moderately with the Greeks, showing leniency and self-restraint during and after the war, he was given a
triumph on his return to Rome. This Roman defeat of the most powerful remaining
Diadochi state has been considered the establishment of Roman
unipolar control over the
Mediterranean litoral. While consul, he was also responsible for the , which placed responsibility for
intercalation of the
Roman calendar with the
college of pontiffs. This was necessary because the calendar was sometimes manipulated by the
Senate for political ends, speeding or delaying elections or limiting or extending terms in office, and could fall far out of sync with the seasons. In the year after his service as proconsul in Greece, he attempted to stand for the
censorship. He was, however, accused by the plebeian tribunes of having concealed a portion of the Greek spoils in his own house and, after one of his
legates gave evidence against him, he withdrew from the race and, on the basis of surviving records, seems to have withdrawn almost entirely from public life. His death is not recorded but probably occurred sometime after ==Legacy==