Proxeny for Euboeans
IG II3 1 398 Date: 348? BC
          . . .    . . .  those who are wronged  . . .    . . .  consider and  . . .    . . .  so that no-one may be wronged and that
        (5) the [friendship] and alliance [may be preserved?] between the Athenian  People and the Euboeans;[1] and to praise
        - and Ampheritos and Herakleodoros
         . . .  because they were zealous on behalf of the
        Athenian People and did what good was in their power;
        (10) and they and their descendants shall be proxenoi
        and benefactors of the Athenian People; and to praise
        the Athenian envoys who were sent
        [to - ?, and] those of the allies, and to invite
        them to dinner in the city hall (prutaneion) tomorrow;
        (15) and the treasurer of the People shall give for travelling expenses to the envoys,
        from the People’s fund for expenditure on
        decrees, thirty drachmas each;
        and if it also seems good to the People, the secretary of the Council
        shall also inscribe the proxeny on a stone stele
        (20) and stand it on the acropolis within ten days;
        and for inscribing the stele the treasurer of the People
        shall give twenty drachmas from the People’s
        fund for expenditure on decrees; and the
         . . .  shall be granted [a supply of] weapon-tips, as they
        (25) request.
     
        
        
            