“History is written by the victors.” It’s a familiar line that many people casually attribute to Winston Churchill. But there’s no evidence he ever said it. George Orwell, however, did—and he meant it as a warning.
In his As I Please column for the Tribune on
February 4, 1944, Orwell used the phrase to describe how power shapes memory.
Whoever wins—whether a war, an election, or even a public argument—gets to
decide what “really” happened. And if the winners are totalitarians, they don’t
just shape the story. They can rewrite the past itself.
That idea echoes through one of the most chilling lines in 1984:
“Who controls the past controls the
future. Who controls the present controls the past.”
Orwell feared that authoritarian regimes don’t merely
lie—they attack the very concept of objective truth. If dictators survive, their
lies harden into “history.” If they fall, those lies evaporate. He pointed to
Nazi radio reports of imaginary British air raids. Had Hitler won, those
fictional raids would have become historical fact, dutifully recorded by future
scholars.
So yes—history is written by the winners.
But is it really that simple?
When the Losers Pick Up the Pen
If history were only written by the victors, the 20th
century would look very different. Some of the most destructive political myths
in modern history were crafted not by triumphant powers, but by the
defeated—losers rewriting their loss into a story of betrayal, nobility, or
victimhood.
The Stab‑in‑the‑Back Myth: Germany, 1918
After World War I, Germany’s military leadership faced an
inconvenient truth: they had lost the war. Rather than accept responsibility,
they promoted the Dolchstoßlegende—the Stab‑in‑the‑Back Myth. According
to this narrative, the German army was undefeated on the battlefield but
sabotaged by Jews, socialists, and democratic politicians at home.
It was a lie. But it was a useful lie.
It destabilized the Weimar Republic, fueled antisemitism,
and helped clear the path for the Nazi rise to power. A defeated military elite
rewrote history—and millions paid the price.
The Lost Cause: America, 1865
The Confederacy lost the Civil War. Decisively. And yet, in
the decades that followed, a new story emerged: the Confederacy hadn’t fought
for slavery (despite its own documents saying exactly that), but for “states’
rights.” Slavery, in this retelling, was benign—sometimes even virtuous. The
antebellum South became a romantic fantasy, complete with gallant generals and
loyal enslaved people.
This myth—history written by the losers—reshaped American
memory, culture, and politics for generations. Its echoes still reverberate
today.
Truth as a Fragile Habit
Orwell believed that truth depends on a “liberal habit of
mind”—a willingness to treat facts as something to be discovered, not
manufactured. That habit requires a free press, open debate, and a public that
values accuracy over comfort.
Without those, the idea of a “correct” version of history
collapses. What remains is simply the version with the most power behind it.
Sometimes that power belongs to the victors. Sometimes it belongs to the
aggrieved, the resentful, or the defeated.
Either way, Orwell’s warning stands: If we stop believing
that facts can be true whether we like them or not, then history becomes
nothing more than a contest of narratives—and the loudest storyteller wins.




