

British statesman, soldier and writer
Hyde Park Gate
St Martin's Church, Bladon
Winston Churchill (born 30 November 1874 at Blenheim Palace, Oxfordshire; died 24 January 1965 in London) was a British politician, soldier, journalist, writer and twice prime minister of the United Kingdom. His central historical role came between 1940 and 1945, when he led Britain through the most dangerous phase of the Second World War. Yet he was not a simple heroic figure: his life joins courage, language and political energy with grave misjudgments, imperial convictions and positions that remain contested.

Churchill was born into an aristocratic family. After Harrow and Sandhurst he began a military career, but he also sought a public voice early on: he reported from Cuba, India, Sudan and South Africa. His escape from captivity during the Boer War made him famous in Britain. This early period already showed a pattern that would shape his life: Churchill wanted to act, write, interpret and make himself part of history.
Churchill entered the House of Commons in 1900. He began as a Conservative, crossed to the Liberals in 1904 and later returned to the Conservatives. In pre-First World War governments he worked on social reform, became Home Secretary and in 1911 First Lord of the Admiralty. He was ambitious, brilliant in performance and often willing to take risks in judgment. The Dardanelles and Gallipoli operation of 1915, for which he bore major responsibility, failed disastrously. Churchill lost office and served for a time as an officer on the Western Front.
After the First World War Churchill remained influential but controversial. As Chancellor of the Exchequer he helped decide Britain's 1925 return to the gold standard, later widely seen as a serious economic mistake. In the 1930s he was often outside the centers of power. His warnings about Nazism proved prescient, while his attitude toward India and the British Empire remained hard, colonial and deeply troubling from a present-day perspective. That simultaneity matters: Churchill could see more clearly than many others in one historical question and remain blind in others.
Churchill became prime minister on 10 May 1940. Germany attacked Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands that day; France was close to collapse. Churchill formed a coalition government and joined political resolve to a language that did not deny fear, but turned it into endurance. His speeches did not replace tanks, aircraft or alliances, but they helped the British public face the situation without false comfort.

Churchill's war policy depended on alliances: with the British Commonwealth, later with the United States, and after Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union also with Stalin. The Atlantic Charter of 1941 with Franklin D. Roosevelt set out principles for a postwar order, while standing in tension with the reality of the British Empire. Even during the war, decisions carried heavy moral weight. The Bengal famine of 1943, British priorities over shipping and supply, and Churchill's remarks about India belong to the darkest and most debated chapters of his premiership.
After victory in Europe in 1945 Churchill lost the general election to Clement Attlee's Labour Party. For many people in Britain the war had been won, but the peace needed to be more social and modern. Churchill remained Leader of the Opposition and returned to office in 1951. His second premiership was less decisive than his first. He accepted important parts of the new welfare state, sought a reduction of Cold War tensions and was increasingly weakened by ill health. In 1955 he resigned.

Churchill was not only a politician, but an exceptionally productive author. He wrote biographies, memoirs, histories, speeches and essays. In 1953 he received the Nobel Prize in Literature. His style was rhetorical, rhythmic and consciously historical; he often wrote as if the present had to be turned immediately into memory. That makes his writing powerful, but it also requires distance, because Churchill often narrated history from the viewpoint of an actor shaping his own judgment.
Winston Churchill died in London on 24 January 1965. He was 90 years old and received a state funeral. His significance does not lie in flawless greatness, but in the contradictions of an extraordinary political life: he stood in 1940 for resistance to Hitler, shaped the memory of the Second World War with his words, and remained a man of empire whose blind spots and decisions should not be smoothed away. A good remembrance of Churchill has to hold both truths at once.
until 1965