Diyllus (Ancient Greek: Δίυλλος), probably the son of Phanodemus the Atthidographer (a chronicler of the local history of Athens and Attica), wrote a universal history of the years 357–296 BC.
The work was in 26 books, though only fragments survive.
Both the historian Diodorus Siculus and the biographer Plutarch valued Diyllus as a competent authority.
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