Your content, read by the researchers who cite you. Twenty-eight years of archive. 838,000 readers a year. One editorial slot at a time.
A guest post on Cultural Heritage Online places your work in front of 838,000 organic readers a year — readers who search, cite and return. Published permanently inside an editorial archive active since 1998, curated to the same standard as our in-house magazine. No banners. No sponsored posts.
New clients only — through 31 July 2026: buy one guest post, we publish two. Both permanent. See plans →
An archive — not a feed. Articles enter a permanent editorial structure, indexed for years, not pushed down by a scrolling homepage.
Human editorial review. Every guest post goes through editorial review, language editing and source verification before publication. No automated pipeline. No content mill submissions.
A readership that already exists. 838,000 organic readers a year arrive on the site searching for cultural heritage content — researchers, cultural travel planners, AI search tools.
Editorial publication. Not advertising placement.
A guest post on Cultural Heritage Online enters the same editorial pipeline as our in-house magazine: proposal review, content editing, source verification, author attribution, SEO and AI search optimisation, permanent archiving.
It is catalogued under the appropriate thematic section — Art Nouveau architecture, Renaissance, Belle Époque, Roman archaeology, European heritage broadly — and cross-linked from place-cards and magazine articles already in the archive. The article does not stand alone. It enters a structured editorial geography read continuously since 1998.
What it is not: a sponsored post aggregator, a paid link page, a generic SEO listicle, a block of AI-generated content. Cultural Heritage Online has spent twenty-eight years refusing these formats and will continue to refuse them.
An article read, indexed, archived.
The editorial output is built to last beyond its publication date. Every guest post carries the same structural anchors as our in-house magazine.
Permanent visibility, not an impression count. Cultural Heritage Online is read by researchers, cultural operators, heritage travel planners and AI search engines — an audience that returns and cites, not one that scrolls past.
- Permanent URL under
/magazine/with thematic taxonomy. - Source verification and citation review.
- Lead image sourced and attributed (Wikimedia Commons) if not provided.
- SEO + AI search structured markup applied (Schema.org Article).
- Cross-links from related place-cards and magazine articles in the archive.
- Author byline with link to your company or organisation profile.
Five steps. Thirty days from proposal to publication.
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Proposal and brief
Submit a 200-word abstract with the angle you want to develop. The editorial team evaluates it against the archive: does it add something the archive does not already cover?
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Editorial green light
Acceptance or revision request within 5 business days. If accepted, an editorial slot is reserved. No payment is due before this step.
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Writing
1,200 to 2,500 words depending on the plan. Inline citations. Lead image proposed (or sourced by the editorial team from Wikimedia Commons).
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Editing and source check
Editorial pass: source verification, language editing, SEO and AI search structuring, internal links to related archive content.
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Publication and archive
Article live under
/magazine/, permanent URL, listed in thematic index, indexed by search engines within 48 hours.
The editorial standard, already in the archive.
A Grand Tour for Liberty Lovers
An itinerary through the most significant Art Nouveau palaces and villas in northern and central Italy.
Italian Liberty vs French Art Nouveau: 7 differences
Where Italian Stile Liberty diverges from French Art Nouveau, and why the difference still shapes cultural tourism today.
Renaissance Tuscany: where art meets the land
The Tuscan Renaissance heritage the standard itinerary skips — Pienza, San Quirico, Volterra, Cortona.
Each link opens a full magazine article already published in the archive — the same editorial structure into which the new guest post will be inserted.
Three plans. USD. EUR on request.
Guest Post Standard
Small operator · Single submission · First collaboration
one publication
- One guest article, 1,200–1,800 words
- Editorial review and language editing
- One lead image sourced and attributed
- Permanent URL under
/magazine/ - Author byline with one outbound link
- Listed in thematic taxonomy
Guest Post Plus
Cultural foundation · PR agency · Heritage operator
one featured article
- One guest article, 1,800–2,500 words
- Editorial review, source check, AI search optimisation
- Two lead images sourced and attributed
- Permanent URL under
/magazine/ - Up to three outbound links from author byline
- Cross-links from three related archive articles
- Featured position in thematic index for 90 days
Guest Post Annual
Institution · Ongoing programme · Multi-venue group
four articles · 12 months
- Everything in Plus, across each of the following —
- Four guest articles distributed over twelve months
- Permanent author profile on CHO
- Editorial calendar planning session at year start
- Quarterly visibility report (organic reach, indexing, citations)
- Priority publication window for time-sensitive articles
All prices in USD. EUR billing available on request. Invoiced by OASIS Tech LLC (Wyoming, USA). Payment via Stripe or bank transfer. Full refund if the editorial team rejects your draft after accepting the proposal.
Publication agreement (draft) —
Standard PDF ·
Plus PDF ·
Annual PDF
Documents in English. Governing law: Wyoming, USA. EU clients: GDPR clause included.
Looking for a permanent editorial presence
rather than a single article?
Founding Partners receive a permanent editorial feature — a full institutional profile written by our team, published as original CHO editorial content — alongside a platform listing, a backlink, and access to our 838,000 annual readers. No per-article billing.
Explore the Editorial Feature →What authors want to know before they propose.
Will the article be labelled as sponsored?
No. Guest posts that pass editorial review are published with the same author-byline structure as in-house magazine articles. The author’s affiliation is declared in the byline, not in a sponsored-content banner.
What happens if the proposal is rejected?
Nothing is charged. The editorial team reviews the proposal first; payment is invoiced only after acceptance and when the editorial slot is reserved.
Can I submit content already published elsewhere?
No. CHO accepts only original editorial material. The article must not have been published, in whole or in part, on any other site including the author’s own blog. Promotional republication of the published CHO article on your own channels is permitted.
Who owns the article after publication?
Cultural Heritage Online holds exclusive editorial rights over the published version. The author retains the underlying research, drafts, and the right to cite the published article elsewhere.
Can the article be removed after publication?
No. Guest posts enter a permanent editorial archive. Factual corrections are possible on request; removal is reserved for editorial integrity reasons (e.g., retraction following a verified factual error).
How long does the editorial process take?
Proposal review: up to 5 business days. Editing and source check: 10–15 business days from draft submission. Publication: within 30 days of proposal acceptance for Standard and Plus; distributed over 12 months for Annual.
Is there a refund policy?
Yes. If the editorial team rejects the draft after accepting the proposal, the full amount is refunded. If the article is published as agreed, no refund is available. Annual plan clients receive a proportional refund on unused article slots if the contract is terminated early.
How does the “buy one, get two” offer work?
New clients who purchase any plan before 31 July 2026 receive a second guest post at no extra cost, at the same plan level. Submit two proposals. Both go through the standard editorial process. If a refund is requested on the first article, both articles are removed from the archive.
Do you accept articles on non-Italian European heritage?
Yes. The English-language programme covers all European and Mediterranean heritage: Art Nouveau Brussels, Ottoman Istanbul, Baroque Prague, Renaissance Florence, Belle Époque Paris, UNESCO Bordeaux, Scottish castles, Douro wine heritage, and more. Italian clients are served by the separate Italian-language programme.
Submit a proposal. Enter the archive.
One proposal, one editorial review, one permanent article in an archive read continuously since 1998. No banners, no advertorial, no content mill submissions.
