In consequence of this exploit Philopoemen was beloved by the Greeks and conspicuously honoured by them in their theatres, thus giving secret umbrage to Titus Flamininus, who was an ambitious man. For as Roman consul he thought himself more worthy of the Achaeans’ admiration than a man of Arcadia, and he considered that his benefactions far exceeded those of Philopoemen, since by a single proclamation he had set free all those parts of Greece which had been subject to Philip and the Macedonians. Cf. the Flamininus , chapter x. After this Flamininus made peace with Nabis, Cf. the Flamininus , ix. 5. and Nabis was treacherously put to death by the Aetolians. In 192 B.C. Nabis had called in the Aetolians to help him against the Achaeans and Romans ( Livy, xxxv. 35-37 ). Sparta was therefore in a state of confusion, and Philopoemen, seizing his opportunity, fell upon the city with an armed force, and partly by compulsion, partly by persuasion, brought it over to his purposes and made it a member of the Achaean league.