At Mycale, Greek victory became irreversible. Persian power in the Aegean did not recover.In 479 B.C., the balance of power in the eastern Mediterranean was shifting with sudden speed. Xerxes' grand invasion had been checked at Salamis and broken at Plataea, yet Persian forces still retained naval strength in the Aegean and authority along the coast of Asia Minor. At Mycale, the Greeks chose not merely to defend their freedom, but to carry the war to the enemy and decide the conflict on foreign shores.This book examines the Battle of Mycale not simply as a coastal engagement, but as the decisive operational moment that transformed Greek resistance into sustained strategic ascendancy. It analyzes the erosion of Persian momentum, the cohesion of the Hellenic alliance, and the pressures that made renewed confrontation unavoidable.At the center stands the Greek coalition command — balancing Spartan leadership, Athenian energy, and allied coordination in a campaign across the sea. The Persian withdrawal of their fleet to land, the construction of a fortified camp beneath Mount Mycale, and the attempt to preserve combat power under worsening conditions are examined in detail. The Greek landing, advance, and destruction of the Persian position are assessed with tactical precision.Mycale demonstrates a crucial military principle: success must be exploited before the enemy can reorganize. What had begun at Salamis and continued at Plataea was completed at Mycale, where initiative, morale, and disciplined aggression converted earlier victories into final decision. The battle shattered Persian naval capacity in the region and accelerated revolt among the Ionian Greeks.Drawing on ancient sources including Herodotus and Diodorus, this study reconstructs the battle with clarity and discipline. The volume includes:• Full political and strategic background of the final phase of the Persian Wars• Order of battle and force composition• Step-by-step battlefield reconstruction• Tactical diagrams and coastal deployment analysis• Chronological timeline from Salamis to Mycale• Operational and strategic lessons relevant to modern military thoughtWritten for readers of military history, strategy, and classical warfare, this volume moves beyond heroic legend to examine how leadership, coalition warfare, and decisive action shape the outcome of war.Mycale was not merely another battle.It was the moment Greece took command of the war.