Imagine this scenario: You have a personal, and somewhat random, blog that you write on for about six months, then you decide that you want to start a new blog on a specific topic instead (or in addition to) so all those people don’t have to weed through descriptions of your lunch so they can find the secret to beating level 29 in Donkey Kong 73. So you decide to start a gaming blog. The only thing is, what if you want to put some of your better content on the new blog instead? Google doesn’t like it when you re-post something on a different domain.
I ran into this problem myself. I’d, for about 6-7 months, been blogging at http://redwallhp.ntugo.com. Eventually I decided to start blogging here instead, so I revamped this site into a blog. Then I launched NTugo. I was quickly out of time for my old blog. I’d mainly posted computer stuff on there anyway, so Webmaster-Source and the NTugo blogs covered me fine.
My solution was to weed through my old blog and find some of its best content. I then copied and pasted from the old blog’s post editor into Webmaster-Source and InfiniTech. To avoid having duplicate content, I set-up 301 redirects in the old blog’s .htaccess file. If someone tries to access my tutorial on making business cards at from the permalink on the old blog, they bounce over to here. While I was making those changes, I also moved the blog from it’s subdomain at redwallhp.ntugo.com to redwallhp.ntugo.com/oldblog/ so I could use redwallhp.ntugo.com for other things.
So, here’s the .htaccess file from the blog:
#Activate the Rewriting Engine
RewriteEngine On
Redirect permanent /2007/04/18/tutorial-create-a-business-card-in-photoshop/ http://www.webmaster-source.com/2007/06/03/create-a-business-card-in-photoshop/
Redirect permanent /2007/04/18/tutorial-create-a-business-card-in-photoshop http://www.webmaster-source.com/2007/06/03/create-a-business-card-in-photoshop/
Redirect permanent /oldblog/2007/04/18/tutorial-create-a-business-card-in-photoshop/ http://www.webmaster-source.com/2007/06/03/create-a-business-card-in-photoshop/
Redirect permanent /oldblog/2007/04/18/tutorial-create-a-business-card-in-photoshop http://www.webmaster-source.com/2007/06/03/create-a-business-card-in-photoshop/
[…]
# BEGIN Old WordPress Redirect
<IfModule mod_rewrite.c>
RewriteEngine On
RewriteBase /
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
RewriteRule . /oldblog/index.php [L]
</IfModule>
# END Old WordPress Redirect
The Redirect permanent
lines are to redirect the business card tutorial. The first two lines cover the redirection if accessed through the original permalink (with and without a trailing slash). The second two lines cover the redirection if it’s accessed through the /oldblog/ permalink. There are several more lines like these for different posts.