Ottoman Buda took
Buda after a long siege in 1686 In 1541,
Buda was conquered by the Turks in the
siege of Buda, and was under Ottoman rule for the next 145 years. Under Ottoman rule the economic decline of
Buda, the capital city of Hungary, was characterized by the stagnation of population. The population of Buda was not larger in 1686 than the population of the city two centuries earlier in the 15th century. The Ottomans allowed the Hungarian royal palace to fall into ruins. The
amortized palace was later transformed into a gunpowder storage and magazine by the Ottomans, which caused its detonation during the siege in 1686. The original Christian Hungarian population did not feel secure during the Ottoman conquest, and their numbers significantly shrank in the next decades, because they fled to the Habsburg-ruled
Royal Hungary. The number of Jewish and Gypsy immigrants became dominant during the Ottoman rule in Buda. It became an Ottoman cultural and commercial center.
Earlier phases of the 1683 war Following the
Ottoman failure in the
second siege of Vienna, which started the
Great Turkish War, Emperor
Leopold I saw the opportunity for a counter-strike and the conquest of Hungary, so that the Hungarian capital
Buda could be gained from the Ottomans. With the aid of
Pope Innocent XI, the
Holy League was formed on 5 March 1684, with
King Jan Sobieski of Poland, Emperor Leopold I and the
Republic of Venice agreeing to an alliance against the Turks. However, the Holy League's
first attempt on Buda ended in defeat, the Austrians and their allies having to withdraw with great losses after 108 days of besieging the Ottoman-held city. ==Siege==