Is Zhuge Liang not worthy of being mentioned?

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El Danny

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To be fair 9 doesn't even belong there, she was banner bearer, not a general, and Wellesley was far better then Napoleon, (battle of Assaye anyone?)

I'd argue that Sima Yi deserves the to be on that list over Zhuge Liang, if not for his battlefield accomplishments then certainly the stuff he did off the battlefield, like I dunno, corrupt an entire dynasty and over several decades take every piece of power they have.
 

Terrible Opinions

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Genghis Khan/Subutai should be on top; largest contiguous empire in the world all conquered in the span of a single life should be worth a hell of a lot. The lack of Rommel on the list is pretty damn surprising.

My personal dark horse: Czech general Jan Zizka, who fought Crusaders on behalf of the Hussites, get a nod. His status in history is pretty minor compared to most everyone else on the list, but god damn he just would not go down.
 

Do4600

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They also left out Tamerlane, who after a tax revolt in one of his cities killed all 70,000 of it's inhabitants including woman and children and had their skulls piled up in a pyramid and had their fields sewn with salt.
 

SckizoBoy

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cahtush said:
Just a note on this, i'd say marching over the alps is a pretty bug risk.
Also i remember seeing a documentary on TV that said that Hannibal lost support (didint get reinforcements and such) from the leaders in Carthage adn that it was major reason he failed in italy. Not really a reliable source so i wont take it as fact, but if so his situation might have been that of Rommel, losing due to attrition.
A derp moment if I've ever had them. What I meant is that once he entered Cis-alpine Gaul, nothing he did seemed planned except at a tactical level and when he did reach Capua and advanced then into Magna Graecia, he did nothing to risk the numerical integrity of the African core of his army (again except tactically because that was what he knew). However, he was cursed as much by politics as any good commander since the Conservative party back home (lead by... Hanno... I keep getting confused by the homogeneity of Carthaginian names, damnit...) refused him funds and levies, so it was all up to his brothers and Gisco to do it for him.

However, I credit Scipio for overcoming this in rather flamboyant style. After Cannae, the survivors were all exiled to Sicily for the remainder of the war. Roughly eight thousand, and this was all he was given to prepare an invasion with. The Sicilians had a 'duty' to Rome but weren't particularly enamoured of it, and yet he managed to raise a corps of cavalry effectively for free ("Noble sons, you're coming with me! No? Well, you're exempt if you pay for your replacement, his training and equipment!"). He tested this out on three hundred in Messana, before applying it to the entire island.

albino boo said:
Gaius Julius Ceasar did fight the celts. The Gauls are the name for the Celts in what is now France. Celtic culture spread from Ireland to France, there was even a Celtic kingdom in modern turkey. Celt is very lose term, largely defined by artefacts and speaking a similar language. Its got be lose because only because they did not leave any written records. If you only define Celt as the pre Roman culture living in what's now the UK and Ireland, Ceaser launched 2 expeditions into the SE of England. These more of the equivalent of airstrikes and regime change, rather than a real attempt to add Britain to the empire. Ceaser also achieved decisive victories over Roman armies led by rival Roman generals. The level of fame that he achieved is such that his versions of his name, in the local language, was still be used as the title of rulers in the 20th century. I think last to go was the Tsar of Bulgaria in 1946, 1998 years after Gaius Julius Ceasar death. I believe the last holder of the title is still alive and entered Bulgarian politics.
I should've seen that coming... ¬_¬ all I think of when someone mentions ancient France is Trans-alpine Gaul and little else. Yes, the Celtic influence was quite diverse, and I think the Turkish tribe you're referring to are the Galatians. I was pondering the Illyrians, thanks to that myth of the 'barbarian sons' Celtus, Illyrius and Galas...

Still, for someone who loves this kind of history, I know surprisingly little of Caesar's British expeditions... *sigh* here goes for book hunting.

And while Bulgaria was the was the last to have a titular namesake of him, every language group of Europe, north Africa and the middle east translate the word 'emperor' to some variation of 'Caesar'. Only the Romance languages and English does the etymology come from 'imperator'. I find it amusing, if nothing else (Augustus and all that).

goodman528 said:
[Roman] Scipio Africanus (Saved Roman Republic. Changed a few hundred years of history by destroying Carthage)

[Roman] Julius Caesar (Destroyed Roman Republic. Changed a few hundred years of history.)
Scipio - the man with whose death spelled the rise of the Roman Republic.

Caesar - the man with whose death spelled the fall of the Roman Republic.

Never fails to amuse...

[European] Alfred von Schlieffen (Creator of the Schlieffen plan, which is the plan used by Germany in both first and second world wars, so he changed history also)
Not necessarily... ultimately the Schlieffen Plan failed because the Germans were no longer as flexible as they were forty years previously to WWI, and it was adapted for use in WWII as a deterrent to Hitler for invading France. The Manstein Plan was less a rethink, not even an overhaul but an entirely different plan altogether. With your reasoning, I'd put Guderian, for revolutionising the use of tanks and its use in manoeuvre warfare. *shrug*

As you can see from the above list, just being a military genius is not enough, winning a few battles is not enough, winning a war or two is not enough, to make it on the list, you have to have changed world history for a few hundred years with your military abilities.
Fair points, but there are too many factors that contribute to the inherent impact of an individual as a military leader and that includes political context during which conflict occurred, the military norms and mores of the era, degree to which a conflict can change political boundaries in terms of both endurance and distance, general mentality of the culture from which the military leader is drawn and most importantly of all: political influence wielded. It makes comparisons virtually pointless because in nearly all cases, these various aspects are markedly different. You are thus split among three decidedly different beasts: the soldier-king (Genghis Khan, Frederick the Great and their ilk); the opportunists (Joan of Arc from the original list, Prince Eugene of Savoy etc.); and the career soldiers (John Churchill, von Moltke the Elder and so on). Thus, their ability to win battles and wars for their nations is not in question, but what is in question is their ability to act freely from the decisions and interference of whom they rule and whom rule them.

Leaving aside memory, should the only way to accord merit to a military leader on the grounds of historical staying power of his/her actions, then even your list has undeserving people on it (most notably Schlieffen) while some are missing: Peter the Great (while not militarily particularly good, he founded the Russian Empire, largest contiguous land empire second only to the Mongol Empire, and the spread of Russian culture); Alexander the Great (pan-Hellenism, the fall of the Archaemenid Empire etc.); Fatih Sultan Mehmet (relocated the Ottoman capital to Istanbul upon its fall 1453, initiated Ottoman expansion into Europe and they ended up knocking on the gates of Vienna on a few occasions, the first time within 32 years and a lot of Turkish culture remains in the Balkans); & Bertrand de Guesclin (largely responsible for the defeat of the English in the middle phase of the Hundred Years War, which doomed England ultimately, thanks to population differences, without him European politics could've been oh so different with a united English/French throne at first, then Spain/German princes/HRE/anyone close enough with sufficient leering soldiers jumping on the opportunity to expand with the inevitable civil war).

Also, no disrespect but how did Napoleon 'unite Europe' (apart from unite against him, because a fair proportion of France hated his guts) since his only appreciable allies were the Polish, Swiss and some southern Germans.

Volf said:
um...are you a history teacher or something?
Nope, just love the subject...

goodman528 said:
I researched a bit into Chinese history, and discovered since the unification of China in 221BCE, for two thirds of the time China was united, for the other one third of the time (total of about 700 years) China was divided. Without the military genius of the three people mentioned above, China would have been divided for a lot longer, and perhaps the definition of China as a nation would be different from what it is today. These people are simply amazing.
I really should look this stuff up. The only problem I have is with the veracity of the primary sources, though I guess in general, they can't really make it up, but they can (and I know they did) inflate a lot of figures, overstated a lot of actions and placed credit where it didn't belong. One of the reasons I've never been that into Chinese history (despite being on) is because they, more than almost every other culture with a dense written record, were prone to the whole 'the victor writes the story' behaviour. I guess this is true of most (Plutarch... I so want to slap you), but at least with other ancient histories, there have always been several versions or they were written by those who had no vested interest in its outcome.
 

DJjaffacake

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goodman528 said:
On a side note, if you think about the proportion of people who should make up that top ten list, I think the break up should be something like this:

3 Romans (Because without a few military geniuses you just don't get an empire that stretches across three continents and lasts 2000 years [including Byzantine, because the term Byzantine was a 19th century invention, and what we know as Byzantine empire was really the Roman empire])

2 European (Because unlike China and America, Europe was a divided mess for ~1500 years, so there had to be more military genius out of all the warfare)

2 Middle East or Indian (Long recorded history, divided territories, however they seemed to have produced more mathematicians, poets, and philosophers than military men. It's a different culture to Rome/Europe)

1 Chinese (Long recorded history, but for the most part united. Also in China, to get into the government, you must pass civil service exams [true even today]. So all famous Chinese military commanders are actually scholars and only concerned with the military as a part time interest.)

1 North or South American (Because America continent has such a short recorded history)

1 Flexible

Based on that, my top ten would be:

[Roman] Scipio Africanus (Saved Roman Republic. Changed a few hundred years of history by destroying Carthage)

[Roman] Julius Caesar (Destroyed Roman Republic. Changed a few hundred years of history.)

[Roman] Constantine the Great (Saved the Roman Empire, which lasted for another 1000 years thanks to him. Changed world history by making Europe Catholic)

[European] Napoleon Bonaparte (United Europe. Changed a couple of hundred years of history, and heavily influenced European government and legal systems)

[European] Alfred von Schlieffen (Creator of the Schlieffen plan, which is the plan used by Germany in both first and second world wars, so he changed history also)

[Indian] Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (His concept of non-violence is simply incredible, and I hope this idea makes him the man who is and will be changing world history long into the future.)

[Middle East] Cyrus the Great (United Persia, founding an empire that changed history for a few hundred years, and defines Persian identity)

[Chinese] Yu Qian (Saved China from Mongol invasion. Changed a few hundred years of Chinese history by continuing the reign of the Ming dynasty.)

[American] George Washington (Founder of USA. Changed history to this day by overseeing the writing of the American constitution.)

[Flexible] Genghis Khan (This guy is right up there with a major natural disaster that causes species extinction, so he needs no more explanation)

As you can see from the above list, just being a military genius is not enough, winning a few battles is not enough, winning a war or two is not enough, to make it on the list, you have to have changed world history for a few hundred years with your military abilities.
I must, am afraid, question your list. Firstly, I think there should be more Europeans than Romans, because Roman expansion was more of a gradual thing and only one or two commanders really stood out. And this may just be my lack of knowledge of the continents, but I can't name any really great American leaders.
Firstly, I would remove Julius Caesar, as his achievments were political as much as anything, and other Roman leaders have equalled his achievments (ie Trajan, Hadrian, Marcus Aurelius). I would replace him with Wellington as a European for being the only general to constantly win against the French Empire (and Assaye). Also, Von Schlieffen would go, because he had an impact on history certainly, but not one that demonstated his ability (trench warfare=bad). I would replace him with someone like Frederick the Great, for creating a powerful Prussia, which had a big impact on history. Gandhi, while a great man, was not a military leader, so I think Saladin should replace him for uniting Arabia and recapturing Jerusalem. George Washington, while he did help create the American Constitution, was not a particularly good military commander, so if an American is necessary I'd go with Eisenhower, as the man who oversaw Operation Overlord, the liberation of France and the Low Countries, and the Invasion of Germany.
 

Mangod

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BlackSaint09 said:
Greetings my fellow escapists.
So there is this local History magazine here in Estonia where i live that has many many wonderful articles regarding history in it. However when browsing through this months edition of said article i came across an article that was called "Top Ten Military leaders".
The list went as follows:
10:George Patton
09:Jeanne D'Arc(Forgive me if i misspelled it)
08:Attila
07:Genghis Khan
06:William the Conqueror
05:Georgi Zukov
04:Saladin
03:Hannibal
02:Alexander the Great
01:Napoleon Bonaparte

Now please forgive the mistakes in the names however they have been translated from my native language into english.
Now. What i thought is this. If i recall correctly then Zhuge Liang isn't a military leader rather a strategist. However i must admit i do not know much about the Three kingdoms era other than what i read off of wikipedia and Dynasty Warriors.
So i guess the questions are as follows. Should Zhuge Liang be on this list by definition? And if so are these people greater strategists than him?
Anyone who invades Russia in winter automatically loses any and all rights to the descriptive "great military leader" or similar.
 

BlackSaint09

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I would like to remind you all that this is a magazine that i have no part in making.
Second i would like to apologise for absolutely forgetting to differentiate between "Romance of the three kingdoms" and the actualy bloody three kingdoms era.
Third i would like to ask if there wasnt a strategist/military leader from the Japanese army considering they won a fight against the Russians after conquering several parts of China?

And last i would like to say that im not very smart when it comes to history.
 

goodman528

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SckizoBoy said:
The reason for including Schlieffen is simple, I didn't want to include Hitler.

Of course Napleon united Europe, that's why Europeans use Civil law and Brits use Common law.

People's positions doesn't matter, if they are king, soldier, or opportunist, the key is their ability to do what others around them failed to do and in doing so, changed the course of world history. Those ten certainly did change world history.

Chinese history is very well recorded, and very honest. The reason is very simple, in Chinese history it is a great honor to disagree with the current emperor, speak your mind at court, and be punished. If you do this, then your family can brag about it for generations. The greatest enemy of a Chinese emperor is his officials, whenever he does or doesn't do anything, there will be officials submitting official documents to say he is wrong. The voice of the people. This was one of the three founding principals of the Republic of China (1912), unfortunately communists won the civil war. However you only have to look at the number of people in China jailed under the "Inciting subversion of state power" law (most famously Liu XiaoBuo) to see this tradition is not lost.
 

Xangba

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Varanfan9 said:
Meh there is probably plenty of generals people want on that list that didn't make it. Personally I would want Sherman up there but whatever. Opinionated list is opinionated. Make your own if you want.
As in Tecumseh Sherman? The man burned a relatively lightly defended South. He's a bastard not a top ten general. Sure he was pretty good in command, but nowhere near a top ten list. Actually I don't believe a single person from the Civil War would deserve it except maybe Thomas Jackson, and that's a stretch. I think the one that impressed me the most was Forrest though. Impressive cavalryman, pulled off some high risk tactics that gave him victories he had no right to get, and had no military training to boot. Heck, even Sherman said he'd catch Forrest if it cost ten thousand men and bankrupts the treasury. Too bad his men kept getting taken from him. Anyway like I said, I doubt anyone from the American Civil War should be on this kind of list.
 

goodman528

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DJjaffacake said:
Caesar was a general who became emperor, he fought a civil war against Pompey, and won. He crossed the Rubicon and fought a proper battle which he commanded. George Washington was the chief of staff of the American Army. Schlieffen had nothing to do with trench warfare, his plan almost worked, but the army advanced too far away from the railway lines and couldn't be supplied in time. Gandhi is possibly the greatest military leader of all time, he showed the world how you fight a lot of guys with guns when you don't have any guns.

The reason Rome has 3 slots is because Roman empire lasted from 509BCE to 1453CE and had a huge influence on the history of the entire EuroAsia landmass, so anyone able to save the Roman empire is a hero. Whereas a European... ... what's the most influence he can have? Being the king of Spain, Germany, Holland, Italy, England, and Ireland at the same time, now that's pretty influential right? Philip II did that, but England is still England, Spain is still Spain.
 
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SckizoBoy said:
Have to disagree with your assessment of Hannibal, who has to be one of the greatest military leaders of all time:

He led an army of many thousand men across mountainous and difficult terrain, encountering various hostile tribes along the way. He won the battle of Trebia, against numerically superior forces, then Lake Trasimere, slaying 15,000+ enemy and killing their general. The result was so terrible that Rome adopted the Fabian strategy and simply refused to meet him in a pitched battle for many years.

That was before his greatest battle, Cannae, where he inflicted probably the greatest defeat ever suffered by a Roman army, utterly wiping out a force of about 50,000+, along with senators and other high-ranking people. He managed to subsequently turn a great deal of Italy against Rome, and would have marched on Rome has it not been for the losses his army had suffered. The only reason Hannibal ever failed was because he was in foreign territory for 17 years without major reinforcement and holding together different kinds of people.

True, Scipio won Zama against Hannibal, but he had much superior cavalry and was better resourced. And this was one battle... It doesn't make Scipio a superior general.
 

DJjaffacake

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goodman528 said:
I'm not denying that julius Caesar was impressive, it's just that this is a top ten, and therefore he isn't (in my opinion) that good, like I said, other Romans did equally impressive things. Being the Chief of the General Staff does not make you awesome automatically, I'm not sure what your point is here (that isn't meant to sound snobby). The Sclieffen plan isn't on its own responsible for trench warfare, no, but its underestimation of the Russians was a contributing factor, and since that's all he really achieved, I don't see him as one of the top ten ever. Again, if you're not fighting, you're not fighting, and while Gandhi was arguably the greatest leader ever, he was not a military leader.

Agreed, Rome had a huge influence, but saying that Europe didn't is wrong. The British, French, Spanish, Portuguese and Dutch Empires controlled vast areas of the globe and brought their own culture. Much of Africa, the Americas, Australasia and even Asia are as they are today because of Europeans. And if you're going with being the king of lots of different places, how about the King of one quarter of the world.
 

WanderingFool

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I dont know who that guy is, but again, I dont know that much about Ancient Chinese history. But looking at the list as is, it would seem hard to say where he would fit, it looks pretty tight right now.
 
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I feel like I need to put my own list up for debate.

10 - The Byzantine Emperor Heraclius. Called into action when the usurper Emperor Phocas when on a subject killing rampage. He took his small army and navy and attacked Phocas' forces. They rebeled and joined Hearclius. Heraclius killed off Phocas. Then he had to deal with the fact that the Persian Empire had invaded, the Persian King of Kings was friends with the Byzantine Emperor Maurice, the man that Phocas had killed to take the throne. He took his small force, and in a brilliant campaign beat four Persian armies in quick order, all of them lager then his own force, and forced the Persians to sue for peace. However, just a few years later the Muslim armies burst out of Arabia and the Byzantine Empire lost most of the land that Heraclius reconquered from Persia. That said...

9 - I see Saladin on a lot of lists but no Muslim commander was as great as Khalid ibn al-Walid, the "Sword of Islam" He was in some where around a hundred battles and won most of them. He conquered the Sassanid Persian Empire and almost did the same for the Byzantine Empire, only the mighty curtain walls of Constantinople kept the Muslims at bay. His crowing battle was Yarmouk, Khalid attacked a huge Byzantine-Allied army, the Arabs were numbered at 24,000. The Byzantines at 100,000. The Byzantine Army when down in crushing defeat.

8 - Hannibal Barca. The man that made the Roman Republic tremble in fear. Hannibal was a master commander that could beat forces much larger than his own. As the Roman learned at Trebia, Lake Trasimene, and, of course, Cannae. However his Honor got in way as he could not force the Romans Italian allies to join his side. They knew that Hannibal would not destroy them, so the only way the allies would lose is if they join Hannibal and Rome won in the end. So they stayed neutral and, indeed, Hannibal payed for it. He was called back to Carthage and was forced to defend it from the invading Romans, were he was defeated by Scipio Africanus. However, this does not rob Hannibal of his great victories and Cannae is still the ideal for a encirclement battle today.

7 - Ferdinand Foch. Sometimes giving an failing army the morale to fight on is as great as any tactic and few in history were as good as Ferdinand Foch. From playing the instrumental part in the French victory on the Marne in 1914. To restoring the French "Elan vital" after the 1917 mutinies. He also helped stop the German attack "Operation Michael" and won the Second Battle on the Marne. Also, at the first Marne he is reported to have said "Hard pressed on my right; center is yielding; impossible to maneuver. Situation excellent, I shall attack!" and that is awesome.

6 - Napoleon Bonaparte, First French Emperor. Why is Napoleon not higher on the list? Because I find his victories impressive, but not the man. He had little care for the lives of the troops under his command, after Austerlitz one of this sub-commanders asked him what will we do about the heavy losses and Napoleon said "The women of Paris can replace these men in a night". Part of being a good commander is keeping as many of your men alive as you can. Something Napoleon did not do, as his invasion of Russia shows us.

5 - Alexander Suvorov, the great Russian Count and one of the few that that clam to never have lost a battle. His "The Science of Victory" is a great treatise on military matters. His battles in putting down the Polish Uprising, fighting the Ottomans and in the French Revolutionary Wars are all brilliant, too many to name here so go look them up!

4 - Arthur Wellesley, The Duke of Wellington. The Iron Duke and the hero of Great Britain. Much like Suvorov his battles and tactics are the stuff of brilliance. From India to Belgium his destroyed his foes, he is or course known for beating Napoleon at Waterloo. Like Suvornov his victories are too many to count here so go look them up too!

3 - Flavius Belisarius. Belisarius' was a miracle worker with small armies. His crushing victories at Dara over the Persians, the battles at Ad Decimum and Tricamarum where he destroyed the army of the Kingdom of the Vandals. And his battles in the Gothic War all the great victories. Truly he deserves his title of "The last of the Romans"

2 - Genghis Khan. As someone said before me "Genghis Khan was more a force of Nature..." Anyone who is more a force of nature on the battlefield than a man is great. From this uniting of the Mongol Tribes to his conquest of the Shahdom of Khwarezm all were great victories to go down in history.

1 - Alexander the Great. Why is Alexander number one. It is true that many of the people on this list won more battles than him. But none of them have ever inspired people like Alexander, "The Blazing Star". Most of the men on this list, if asked who they would want to be like, they would say Alexander the Great. His victorious battles fighting Darius III and the Achaemenid Persian Empire are still studied today as textbook military victories.

Well there you go. Go ahead and pick it apart. I will admit that I do not like lists like this as there are many Commanders that I think belong in the "Greatest" slot.

(Edit: Sorry they get less descriptive at the end, I've been up all night and am starting to fall asleep at my computer so I needed to wrap it up, so to speak.)

Captcha "Fancy Pants" ...Ok
 

SckizoBoy

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goodman528 said:
Chinese history is very well recorded, and very honest. The reason is very simple, in Chinese history it is a great honor to disagree with the current emperor, speak your mind at court, and be punished. If you do this, then your family can brag about it for generations. The greatest enemy of a Chinese emperor is his officials, whenever he does or doesn't do anything, there will be officials submitting official documents to say he is wrong. The voice of the people. This was one of the three founding principals of the Republic of China (1912), unfortunately communists won the civil war. However you only have to look at the number of people in China jailed under the "Inciting subversion of state power" law (most famously Liu XiaoBuo) to see this tradition is not lost.
Got any reading material you'd like to suggest? Primarily because I'll admit to not knowing that much about Chinese history, but also because I was of the general impression that in order to create the analogous cults of personality, Chinese kings/emperors shut up any naysayers and had their (loyal) civil servants shouting for the dissenters balls (figuratively and literally).

MasterOfHisOwnDomain said:
Have to disagree with your assessment of Hannibal, who has to be one of the greatest military leaders of all time:

He led an army of many thousand men across mountainous and difficult terrain, encountering various hostile tribes along the way. He won the battle of Trebia, against numerically superior forces, then Lake Trasimere, slaying 15,000+ enemy and killing their general. The result was so terrible that Rome adopted the Fabian strategy and simply refused to meet him in a pitched battle for many years.

That was before his greatest battle, Cannae, where he inflicted probably the greatest defeat ever suffered by a Roman army, utterly wiping out a force of about 50,000+, along with senators and other high-ranking people. He managed to subsequently turn a great deal of Italy against Rome, and would have marched on Rome has it not been for the losses his army had suffered. The only reason Hannibal ever failed was because he was in foreign territory for 17 years without major reinforcement and holding together different kinds of people.
Relatively speaking, casualty count at Trasimene was actually barely lower than at Cannae (entire force wiped out by all accounts... there were approx 10000 survivors at Cannae who crawled back to Apulia). And you'll find that the Romans were shockingly impatient... Trasimene and Cannae were barely a year and a half apart...

Anyway, that's beside the point. If we're discussing commanders as tacticians, then I wholeheartedly agree, Hannibal stands head and shoulders above virtually everyone else around him (with a couple exceptions here and there), and I won't hear anything bad said about him. However, on no occasion did he attempt to follow up his tactical victory with a strategic advance on Rome or any of Rome's major vassals/holdings (with the possible exception of Capua). Perhaps he was aware of his limitations in siege inexperience, but he consistently failed to take full advantage of not so much the material victory in battle, but the moral victory. After Trasimene, the Romans didn't have any armies in the field close enough to Rome to counter him and yet he just headed south without doing much of significance. His failure to appreciate the Roman mindset (and that of the southern Graeco-Italians) was what doomed him (as much as the Carthaginian Senate's refusal to furnish him with reinforcements). Making allies of the Gauls and Latins was not his problem: keeping them was, as I mentioned in a previous post, he rarely endeared himself to the southern Italians as Herdonia and Tarentum both fell as a result of dissatisfaction with Carthaginian overlordship and the Capuans, Samnites and Bruttians made indifferent allies for Hannibal at the best of times even though he had united them all in a single alliance against Rome. Yet he made no concerted effort to concentrate them for campaigning. And while the number of troops that he personally commanded (I believe he entered Italy with about fifty thousand) was low, when up against how many troops the Romans fielded, he didn't exactly help himself because he never dictated the terms of engagement, only the engagement itself, which was a tad foolish given his position. Apart from Trebbia, none of the battles he fought were as a result of him taking the strategic initiative, and this was only to his detriment (victorious though he was) as it slowly eroded his army of his elite Africans and Numidian allies.

In comparison, every action Scipio took in Spain had strategic importance and he took full advantage of moral victories as well as battlefield ones. And in a mirroring of Hannibal in Italy, Scipio didn't receive any reinforcements from Rome either (contrary to popular belief, when he assumed the pro-consulship in 210, he commanded a sum total of twenty-two thousand troops in four understrength legions, one of which was an amalgamation of two of his father/uncle's legions after the debacle of Castulo/Ilorca). He needed allies quick, so he got them: the Suessetani, with whom he made an ad hoc deal just to prevent them from throwing their lot in with the Carthaginians too soon, but manages to eke about seven to eight thousand troops out of them and the Ausetani. As soon as spring comes around, he's off. In each of his battles both in Spain and in Africa, there was sufficient motive to fight beyond tactical victory, means to win it (with the exception of Bagrades, for which there is no reliable source for numbers present, he was outnumbered at each setpiece battle) and the presence/foresight to follow up each win with either political or further military action, whether it be to secure allies (Siege of Carthago Nova), liberate (Ilipa) or spread terror (Bagrades).

No disrespect to Hannibal, but aside from being compelled into action, few of his battles had real motive, nor did he seek to give any of his victories any immediate significance beyond the feel good/feel bad for ally/enemy respectively. And unlike Hannibal, any wavering of the support from his allies was diplomatically dealt with (I refer to the post Ilipa rebellion of his Iberian allies when they were free from Carthage and so wanted their suzerainity back). I don't know what Hannibal did, if anything at all, to shore support for him among the Italian tribes, but whatever it was, it didn't work, and that sort of reinforces my belief that he didn't fully comprehend either what they wanted or what they needed (beyond freedom from Rome).

True, Scipio won Zama against Hannibal, but he had much superior cavalry and was better resourced. And this was one battle... It doesn't make Scipio a superior general.
First bit, yes, but that's rather a 'duh' observation since both commanders realised by then that cavalry could and would be a decisive factor. However, Hannibal had 80 elephants at Zama (more than he ever commanded throughout the entire war) who were dealt with to the extent that their involvement was a bit of a sideshow.

As for the second bit... no, no, no, no, no... When Scipio first landed in Sicily (which he was allocated for his consulship in 205), all he was given command of was the survivors of Cannae, which by this time were a ragtag bunch of about eight thousand. He did all recruitment virtually personally, obtained cavalry at no expense to either himself or the state and set off with what he had (approx 35000). The only reinforcements he would receive would be about ten thousand from Masinissa (and I hate it when people say he betrayed Carthage, because he owed them no loyalty when they backed Syphax to be king of Massylia, who was fleetingly a Roman ally as well). Utica and Bagrades put paid to roughly eighty thousand Africans (and Iberian mercenaries), much like Trebbia and Trasimene only in reverse chronological order, the difference being, he marched on Carthage and had them scared shitless much like Hannibal did. That they sued for peace is neither here nor there, so I'll proceed. As soon as Hannibal had been recalled, the Carthaginians raided and stripped clean a supply convoy that was supposed to replenish Scipio's army, so he was hardly in an easy position to conclude the way he wanted to, and yet he adapts.

So, at Zama, numbers of horsemen aside, Hannibal held the advantage in every way, and yet he squandered the advantage he had of fighting on home soil be letting Scipio lead him on. When Hannibal landed in Lepcis Minor and got his army on the move, Scipio was about fifty miles south-west of Tunis. He marched west away from Hannibal and instead of consolidating his position, Hannibal followed (primarily because Scipio was pillaging as he went and everyone demanded action). This forced Hannibal away from his military base and Scipio closer to his (even though he technically didn't have one, I'm counting it as Kirtha, since that was where Masinissa was). And prior to the battle itself, Scipio manouevred in such a way that his camp was about five hundred yards away from the tributary of the river both armies were following. To prevent himself from being exposed, Hannibal had to camp further away and over a few days, he lost a small chunk of his army to Scipio's raiding parties whenever they tried to collect water and ended up fighting with a dehydrated army. No wonder Scipio's thirty-four thousand stood up to Hannibal's fifty-thousand for the duration in what was ostensibly a wide front line of battle engagement... and to rub it in, before the commitment of the triarii, he retired them for a mid-afternoon drink. I'll leave out the elephant killing tricks...

So yes, I do believe Scipio was a superior all round general for the reasons mentioned. That and the fact that he was also very self-effacing for so renowned a military figure, despite his widely known public confidence. He was kept as consul until 203, and upon his Triumph, he was offered the Consulship in Perpetuity, the Dictatorship and Pontifex Maximus (communal with the gods and all that guff). All of which, he refused, even though it would've been all too easy to accept.