This study of the history of the Jewish Publishing House in Berlin, from its establishment in 1902 to its destruction in late 1938, are primarily the company itself, its founders, managers, owners and the broad range of books it published. Above and beyond that, its contacts with institutions, authors and other publishers provide new insights into Zionism and its representatives in Germany, among them Martin Buber, David Wolfssohn and Salman Schocken.