Following the death of Alexander, Athens motivated the Greek city states to rebel against the Macedonian hegemony. Despite initial success it would not end well for them, and ultimately end Athenian Democracy.
Sources:
Ancient Sources:
Diodorus Library of History 17-18
Plutarch Alexander
Plutarch Eumenes
Modern Sources:
Brian Bosworth, ‘Why did Athens lose the Lamian War?’, in The Macedonians in Athens, 322-229 B.C., Olga Palagia and Stephen V. Tracey (eds.), Oxford, Oxbow Books, 2003, pp. 14-22.
Christian Habicht, Athens from Alexander to Antony, Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1997.
N. L. G. Hammond and F. W. Wallbank, A History of Macedonia Volime III, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1988.
Gunther Martin, ‘Antipater after the Lamian War: New Readings in Vat. Gr. 73 (Dexippus fr. 33)’, in The Classical Quarterly, vol. 55, iss. 1, 2005, pp. 301-305.
Joshua Nudell, ‘Facing a New Hellenistic World 323-294’, in Accustomed to Obedience? Classical Ionia and the Aegean World, 480-294, University of Michigan Press, 2023.
John Walsh, 'Lamian War’, in The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece and Rome, Oxford University Press, 2010.
H.D. Westlake, ‘The Aftermath of the Lamian War’, in The Classical Review, vol. 63, iss. ¾, 1949, pp. 87-90.
Ian Worthington, ‘Alexander and Athens in 324/3 Bc: On the Greek Attitude to the Macedonian Hegemony’, Mediterranean Archaeology, vol. 7, 1994, pp. 45-51.