Shortly before he assumed the throne, the Ottomans suffered a major defeat at
the second Battle of Mohács in 1687. In 1688, Suleiman II urgently requested the
Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb for assistance against the rapidly advancing
Austrians, during the
Ottoman–Habsburg War, but most
Mughal forces were engaged in the
Deccan Wars and Aurangzeb ignored Suleiman's request to commit to any formal assistance to their desperate Ottoman allies. The previous ban on alcohol (which was publicly flouted in Istanbul and Galata) was energized under Suleiman, where he managed to demolish several alcohol shops, but this just led to owners bringing in more alcohol.
War in the Balkans On 8 September 1688,
Belgrade fell to a Habsburg army commanded by
Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria, after a siege of nearly a month. The fall of Belgrade opened the road into the
Balkans for the Austrians;
Bosnia,
Transylvania and
Walachia all came under Habsburg pressure. An internal rebellion occurred, led by
Yeğen Osman Pasha, a commander of the Anatolian
sekban forces and
Beylerbey of
Rumelia. Rivalries between the janissaries and the sekbans had helped bring Suleiman to power, but the two corps quickly fell out and fresh revolts broke out. In 1688, his forces plundered the treasury of the
Serbian Patriarchate of Peć, which had been hidden for safekeeping in
Gračanica monastery. According to a contemporary letter by the Catholic bishop
Pjetër Bogdani, Yeğen Osman also threatened to behead the
Archbishop of Peć and
Serbian Patriarch Arsenije III Čarnojević, accusing him of having received Habsburg money to incite an Orthodox Serbian uprising against Ottoman rule. In an attempt to bring him to heel, the sultan appointed Yeğen Osman governor of Belgrade in early 1688. The appointment angered Yeğen Osman because it placed him under the authority of the Ottoman serdar of Hungary, Hasan Pasha. When Habsburg forces besieged Belgrade in the summer of 1688, Yeğen Osman allowed his men to loot the city's bazaars, then withdrew with them southward to
Niš Suleiman II then appointed
Köprülü Fazıl Mustafa Pasha as his
Grand Vizier in 1689, leading to the
reconquest of Belgrade in 1690. Later, the threat from the
Russian Empire was renewed when they joined in an alliance with other European powers, while the Ottomans had lost the support of their
Crimean vassals, who were forced to defend themselves from several
Russian invasions. Under Köprülü's leadership, the Ottomans halted an Austrian advance into
Serbia and crushed an uprising in
Macedonia and
Bulgaria until Köprülü was killed in the
Battle of Slankamen by Austrian forces.
Death Suleiman II set out at the head of the army in early June 1691, intending to be present for the Hungarian campaign. His health worsened rapidly, fell into a
coma and was brought to
Edirne on June 8-9, and he died there on 22 June 1691. His body was buried in Suleiman the Magnificent's tomb at Süleymaniye Mosque in Istanbul. His brother Ahmed succeeded him as Sultan. == Family ==