The Turkish dwelling (Türkisches Wohnhaus) was one of the five pavilions that represented the Ottoman Empire at the world’s fair in Vienna in 1873. It was planned by the architect and decorator Pietro Montani and built by workers who came from the Ottoman Empire to Vienna in 1872. The dwelling had eleven chambers and featured a harem, a selamlık, a kitchen, a bath covered in marble, and a heating chamber. While its appearance was simple from the outside, the interior was opulently decorated, with ceilings of elaborate design, wooden furniture with mother-of-pearl inlays, tapestry, curtains in many colours, including gold, and stucco and glass windows (Sweny, 1874, p. 304).
Sax, C. (1873). Türkei. Gruppe XIV, Section 4. (General-Direction der Weltausstellung 1873 (Ed.), Officieller Ausstellungs-Bericht, Carl T. Richter), Druck und Verlag der k. k. Hof- und Staatsdruckerei.
Sweny, H. W. (1874). Buildings in the Parc. In Reports on the Vienna Universal Exhibition of 1873. Part III. pp. 293–317. George E. Eyre And William Spottiswoode.
Ersoy, A. (2015). Architecture and the Late Ottoman Historical Imaginary. Reconfiguring the Architectural Past in a Modernizing Empire. Ashgate.
Niemand, F. (2021). "Orientalische" und orientalisierende Interieurs auf der Wiener Weltausstellung 1873 im Spiegel der Text- und Bildquellen. In M. Hartmuth, & J. Rüdiger (Eds.), Gezimmertes Morgenland. Orientalische und orientalisierende Holzinterieurs in Mitteleuropa im späten 19. Jahrhundert. Phänomenalität, Materialität, Historizität (pp. 79–96). Böhlau Verlag.