[12] Hypereides Epitaphios 13; he mentions by name the Thessalians, the Phokians, and the Aitolians and gives the credit, perhaps hyperbolically, to Leosthenes. IG II 367 (= Schwenk no. 81) records already in the third prytany of the year 323 honors for a certain Asklepiodoros, ambassador to the Phokians, surely for successfully bringing them into the alliance. The decision to send him must have been made at the time that Alexander's death was confirmed. Diodoros (18.9.5) too gives the credit to Leosthenes and mentions specifically the Aitolians, Lokrians, and Phokians. EM 12736, a small fragment of what may be a treaty between the Athenians and Lokrians, published by O. Broneer in Hesperia 2 (1933) 397-398 and associated by him with the events of this time, belongs in reality to the third century B.C. On the date, see S. V. Tracy, "Two Attic Letter Cutters of the Third Century: 286/5-235/4 B.C. ," Hesperia 57 (1988) 306.