Osman II
Osman II (3 November 1604 – 20 May 1622), commonly known as Genç Osman or "Young Osman," was the sixteenth sultan of the Ottoman Empire, reigning from 26 February 1618 until his deposition and murder on 20 May 1622. [1][2] Ascending the throne at age 13 following the second deposition of his mentally unstable uncle Mustafa I, Osman inherited an empire strained by ongoing wars with Safavid Persia and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, as well as internal corruption and indiscipline among the elite Janissary corps. [3] Ambitious and reform-minded, he personally led the Ottoman forces in the 1621 Hotin campaign against Polish-Lithuanian and Cossack armies, a protracted siege that ended inconclusively with a treaty restoring the pre-war status quo but exposing military weaknesses. [1] Blaming the Janissaries' lack of discipline for the failure, Osman planned sweeping reforms, including abolishing the corps, executing disloyal officers, and raising a new army of loyal levies during a intended Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca; these initiatives, aimed at centralizing authority and curbing entrenched military privileges, provoked a Janissary revolt in Constantinople. [3][4] On 19 May 1622, rebels stormed the palace, deposed him, and the following day he was strangled en route to execution at Yedikule Fortress, marking the first regicide of an Ottoman sultan and highlighting the perilous tensions between imperial reform ambitions and institutional power structures. [2][3]