Let's see if I understand your setup: - Zope behind Apache - Some content from Zope, some from Apache - More than one domain In this case, I recommend using Apache's mod_proxy and mod_rewrite modules together with Zope's VirtualHostMonster. This requires the following steps: 1. Set up Apache so that it has mod_proxy and mod_rewrite enabled. 2. Set up Zope, and choose a port number for it to serve requests on. Port 8080 is the default, and will be used in the examples below. 3. Add a VirtualHostMonster to the root of your Zope. Make up a unique name for it, and read the Add screen, but don't worry about it otherwise. 4. For each domain: 4a. Create a Folder in your Zope root named after the domain (this name is used in step 4e). 4b. Create a <VirtualHost> section in your Apache setup. 4c. In this section, turn on rewriting and set up rewrite logging. 4d. For each path that you want Apache to serve, add a rule that matches the path, leaves it unchanged, and stops rewriting. It will look like this: RewriteRule /apache_content - [L] 4e. Finally, add a rule that matches all remaining paths, rewrites them for the VirtualHostMonster, and sends them through mod_proxy. It will look like this: RewriteRule ^/(.*) http://localhost:8080/VirtualHostBase/ http/www.gitte.com:80/ gitte.com/VirtualHostRoot/$1 [P,L] *This is one line, not three, with no space between parts!* That's all. If your Zope isn't on the same machine as Apache, or isn't on port 8080, change the "localhost:8080". If you name your Zope Folder "www.gitte.com" or "gitte", use that instead of "gitte.com". If you make a <VirtualHost> for access through SSL, change the second part to "https/www.gitte.com:443/". Cheers, Evan @ digicool & 4-am