Osman returns to Constantinople, claiming a momentous…
May 1622 CE
Osman returns to Constantinople, claiming a momentous victory, but his Janissaries, whose pay is in arrears, upbraid him and threaten to revolt.
Realizing that his defeat at Chocim had largely stemmed from the lack of discipline and the degeneracy of the Janissary corps, Osman proceeds to discipline them by cutting their pay and closing their coffee shops.
He now announces a plan to go on a pilgrimage to Mecca, but his real purpose is to recruit a new army in Egypt and Syria to double back and exterminate the Janissaries.
Hearing of this scheme and already resentful because of Osman's previous policies, the Janissaries revolt and storm the palaces on May 18, 1622.
Osman promises to revoke his scheme, but the rebels enter the royal seraglio, demand the person of Mustafa, kill the grand vizier and the chief eunuch, reinstall Mustafa as sultan, and march Osman to their barracks, where they strangle him the next day—the first regicide in Ottoman history.
His ear is sent to the Sultana Valide (queen mother) who had authorized Osman’s execution in order to rule through Mustafa.