Lucius Veturius Philo (consul 206 BC)
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Magister equitum (205 BC)
• Battle of the Metaurus (207 BC)
• Battle of Zama (202 BC)
Lucius Veturius Philo | |
|---|---|
| Office | Consul (206 BC) Magister equitum (205 BC) |
| Father | Lucius Veturius Philo |
| Military career | |
| Wars | Second Punic War • Battle of the Metaurus (207 BC) • Battle of Zama (202 BC) |
Lucius Veturius Philo (before 236 BC – after 202 BC) was a curule aedile in 210 BC,[1] praetor of Cisalpine Gaul in 209 BC,[2] propraetor of the same province in 208 BC,[2] consular legate in 207 BC, consul in 206 BC,[3] and magister equitum in 205 BC.[3] He was renowned for having been the first to announce to the Roman Senate the news of the great victory won over Hannibal Barca at the Battle of Zama, which ended the Second Punic War.
He served in the army of Gaius Claudius Nero as a consular legate, fighting at the Battle of the Metaurus, and was a close companion to his co-consul of 206 BC, Quintus Caecilius Metellus.
He is different from another Lucius Veturius Philo, his father, who served as consul in 220 BC and dictator in 217 BC.
Veturius Philo belonged to the Veturii Philones, an offshoot of the ancient patrician gens Veturia, a powerful patrician family of the Roman Republic. He was the son of the previously mentioned L. Veturius Philo who died during his censorship in 210 BC. Considering his birth had occurred at some point before 236 BC, he was most likely not the father of Tiberius Veturius Philo, the flamen martialis from 204 BC.
Early career
In 210 BC, Veturius Philo was elected curule aedile, at which time, according to Roman law, he would have had to have been at least twenty-seven years old, indicating that he was born at the very least in 237 BC.[1]
In 209 BC, with Quintus Fabius Maximus returning as consul for the fifth time, and Quintus Fulvius Flaccus doing so for the fourth time, the elections of praetors quickly followed, Veturius Philo being elected alongside Titus Quinctius Crispinus, Gaius Hostilius Tubulus and Gaius Aurunculeius. He was assigned the jurisdictio peregrina, or, the jurisdiction over the foreigners in Rome, as well as command over the province of Cisalpine Gaul.[4] Upon the completion of his praetorship in Gaul, during which he had held command over two legions, Philo made the logical continuation into the propraetorship of Cisalpine Gaul, retaining command over his two legions and serving in that capacity during the year 208 BC.[2]
