EHT is a free digital newsletter for European heritage professionals. It aims to build a lasting European network by sharing knowledge, connecting people and the cultural and creative sectors.
With its monthly publication, it offers an overview of the most important heritage news, calls, events, opinions and best practices from all European Countries, covering a very wide range of themes such as digitization, sustainable tourism, archeology, policy, intangible heritage, building.
The European Heritage Tribune is the lasting legacy of the European Year of Cultural Heritage 2018: it is independent, non-profit and is sustained with the support of a host of partners and sponsors both private and public. The website offers the possibility to reach calls, events, select news by theme and it recently hosts the blog of ESACH, the European Students’ Association for Cultural Heritage, a captivating communication channel for sharing young people’s perspectives on cultural heritage. The Heritage Tribune also offers to be a communication or dissemination partner in European projects on culture and cultural heritage: among others, the newsletter currently supports the UNCHARTED project to enlarge its audience and to communicate its progress to the International community of researchers.
Website: heritagetribune.eu
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UPCOMING EVENTS:
London (UK), 4-6 November 2026Languages & The Media, the Biennial International Conference on Audiovisual Language Transfer in the Media, is gearing up for its 16th edition, scheduled from November 4 to 6, 2026, at Senate House, University of London, UK. Under the theme Moving … Continue reading →
A new blog published on Europeana in the context of EUreka3D-XRThe story of Girona is the story of its walls – built in Roman times, altered in the Middle Ages, and demolished in the 19th and 20th centuries. Now the walls are being virtually reconstructed in 3D by the EUreka3D-XR … Continue reading →



An online archive of photos, videos, maps and documents designed to celebrate the city’s heritage: this is the new initiative promoted by Coventry University in cooperation with Coventry City of Culture Trust, Culture Coventry and other partners.
Yesterday, January 26th, it was held the final event of a 3-days online participatory initiative promoted by the HERIWELL project. In the first part of the meeting the HERIWELL team introduced the goals of the project and a brief description of the past two workshops. The presentations that followed highlighted different aspects of the impact of cultural heritage on the well being of society. A representative of the DG Education and Culture shared with the participants the EU programmes for culture and R&I. The debate was characterized by the exchange of experiences and case studies on participation and digitization applied to cultural heritage. Among others, the example of the 











Digital Past is an annual two-day conference organised by the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales. It showcases innovative digital technologies and techniques for data capture, interpretation and dissemination of the heritage of Wales, the UK and beyond.
































