Marcus Valerius Laevinus was a Roman magistrate who was active during both the Second Punic War and the First Macedonian War.

Elected praetor in 215 BC, he was assigned to Brundisium with two legions recently withdrawn from Sicily to protect the Calabrian coast and prevent Philip V of Macedon from giving aid to Hannibal. The next year, his command extended as propraetor with only one legion but a sizeable fleet, he crossed over to Illyria, recaptured Oricum and relieved Apollonia, which was being besieged by Philip. For the next few years, with his command continually extended by the senate, he kept the Macedonians from interfering in Italy by actively cooperating with Philip’s many enemies in the region. In 211, he negotiated a treaty with the Aetolians (one of Philip's main opponents), though this was not ratified by the senate until 209 BC.

In 210 BC, Laevinus was elected consul in his absence, with Marcus Claudius Marcellus as his colleague, and returned to Rome being replaced by the proconsul Publius Sulpicius Galba Maximus.

He was assigned the province of Sicily, which had originally been assigned to Marcellus, later in the same year. He mustered a large army and quickly captured the last major Punic stronghold at Acragas (Agrigentum). It was betrayed to him by Muttines, a cavalry commander who had served in Italy under Hannibal but who had been badly treated by Hanno, the Cathaginian commander in Sicily. In the aftermath of this success, another forty towns and cities voluntarily surrended to Laevinus, twenty were betrayed to him and only six had to be taken by direct assault.

With Sicily subjugated, Laevinus set about reviving agriculture on the island to restore the flow of grain to Italy. In 208 BC, he sent a fleet to North Africa, which attacked Clupea and defeated a Carthaginian fleet. In 207 BC, his fleet ravaged the North African coast around Utica and Carthage, and defeated another Carthaginian fleet. Laevinus was finally recalled to Rome in 206 BC, being replaced by the praetor C. Servilius Geminus.

References

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  • Caven, Brian (1980). "The Punic Wars", Weidenfeld & Nicholson.
  • Goldsworthy, Adrian (2000). "The Punic Wars", Cassell.