Following the death of his father Ferdinand I in 1564, Archduke Charles II assumed rule of the south-eastern part of the Austrian Erblande (hereditary lands): Inner Austria. This included the duchies of Styria, Carinthia, Carniola as well as areas of the county of Gorizia, parts of Istria and Friuli, and the two Adriatic ports of Trieste and Fiume. He chose Graz as his capital and city of residence, since its good fortifications and built structures seemed to make it the most suited to his purposes.
His father’s reign was marked on the one hand by denominational tensions between the Protestant estates and the Catholic Habsburgs, and on the other by Ottoman expansion. Inner Austria directly bordered on the areas in the south of Croatia and Hungary already controlled by the Ottomans. Hence from 1522 onwards a buffer zone developed in almost depopulated Croatia between the Ottomans and the Habsburgs, which was known as the Military Frontier. The administrative management of the border was carried out from Graz together with representatives of the estates and the Hofkriegsrat (war council) of Inner Austria.
Archduke Charles II died in Graz in 1590 and was buried in Seckau Abbey. On his tomb, his effigy is wearing full armour. The original of this armour can be seen today in the Landeszeughaus.