26 The 320’s B.C. had already proven difficult for the Athenians. Severe grain shortages, first attested for 331/0 B.C. were still in evidence during 323/2 B.C., as instanced by E. Schweigert, ‘Greek Inscriptions (1–13)’, Hesperia 8 (1939), 1 ff., esp. 27–30, nr. 7 11. 14-15 = ‘Greek Inscriptions (27–50)’, Hesperia 9 (1940), 309 ff., esp. 335–9, nr. 42 11. 14–15. For the most recently published Attic inscription concerning this famine, see IICamp, J.M., ‘Greek Inscriptions’, Hesperia 43 (1974), 314Google Scholar ff., esp. 3224. nr. 3, with the full available epigraphical evidence listed at 323 n. 45. Literary references are noted by Schweigert, op. cit. (1939), 30 n. 1, and a bibliography for the famine is in Pečírka, J., The Formula for the Grant ofEnktesis in Attic Inscriptions (Prague 1966), 71Google Scholar with n. 2. Added to this prolonged economic crisis, Alexander’s disregard for the terms of the League of Corinth and his increasingly autocratic treatment of the Greek allied states since the return from India must have been particularly galling to the Athenians. On the general discontent at the time note Cary, M., A History of the Greek World from 323 to 146 B.C.2 (London 1959), 4–5Google Scholar and Hamilton, J.R., Alexander the Great (London 1973), 136Google Scholar ff. Alexander-inspired innovations in religious practices at Athens were further causes of irritations—certainly in the matter of hero-cults (see Bickerman, E.J., ‘Sur un passage d’Hyperide (Epitaphios, col. VIII)’, Athenaeum 41 [1963], 70Google Scholar ff.), and probably also in regard to proposed divine honours for the king (e.g. Habicht, C., Gottmenschentum und griechische Städte2 [Munich 1970], 246Google Scholar ff.).