Second Arrangement, B.C. 321.
οἱ βασιλεῖς

Philip III. (Arrhidaeus) half-brother of Alexander, ob. B.C. 317.
Alexander IV. (posthumous son of Alexander by Roxana).
Regent with absolute powers... Antipater, ob. B.C. 318.
Regent with absolute powers... Polysperchon
Strategus of the Empire... Antigonus.
Chiliarch of the Empire... Cassander (s. of Antigonus).
Hipparch ... Seleucus.Captain of the Bodyguards ... Cassander.
B.C. 321. Second Arrangement Of The Provinces.Diod. 18, 39.

(Unchanged.) Macedonia and Greece.Antipater.
(Unchanged.) Egypt & parts of Libya & Asia.Ptolemy s. of Lagus.
Greater Phrygia, Lycia, & Susiana added.Antigonus.
(Unchanged.) CariaCassander.
(Unchanged.) Thrace.Lysimachus.
(Unchanged.) Media.Python.
(Unchanged.) Syria.Laomedon.
Cilicia.Philoxenus.
BabyloniaSeleucus.
Cappadocia.Nicanor.
LydiaCheiton.
Phrygia Hellespontiaca.Arrhidaeus.
Mesopotamia and Asbelitis.Amphimachus.
The other provinces as in the previous list.
Third Arrangement, B.C. 312-311.
King ... Alexander IV. (in charge of Roxana). Strategus in Europe till the king comes of age ... Cassander.
B.C. 312-311. Third Arrangement of the Provinces of the Empire.Diod. Sic. 19, 105.
Egypt.Ptolemy, s. of Lagus.
Thrace.Lysimachus.
Macedonia.Cassander.
All Asia (ἀφηγεῖσθαι).Antigonus.
Babylonia.Seleucus Nicanor.
Greece nominally free, B.C. 307
Demetrius (s. of Antigonus) becomes Master of Athens.

B.C. 311. Alexander IV. and Roxana murdered by order of Cassander.

B.C. 306. Fourth Arrangement. Kingdoms formed, After the naval victory of Demetrius over Ptolemy. Diod. 30, 53.

King of Egypt.Ptolemy, s. of Lagus
King of Syria and Asia.Antigonus.
King of Upper Asia.Seleucus.
King of Thrace.Lysimachus.
King of Macedonia.Cassander.
Demetrius Poliorcetes (s. of Antigonus)also takes the title of _king_, and in B.C. 304 returns to Athensand wages war with Cassander.