Historian and author After two years of postgraduate work, Gilbert was approached by
Randolph Churchill to assist his work on a biography of his father,
Sir Winston Churchill. That same year, 1962, Gilbert was made a
Fellow of
Merton College, Oxford, and became a part of a circle of academics that included
C.S. Lewis and
J.R.R. Tolkien. He spent the next few years combining his own research projects in Oxford with being part of Randolph's research team in
Suffolk, who were working on the first two volumes of the Churchill biography. When Randolph died in 1968, Gilbert was commissioned to take over the task, completing the remaining six main volumes of the biography. Gilbert spent the next 20 years on the Churchill project, publishing a number of other books throughout the time. Each main volume of the biography is accompanied by two or three volumes of documents initially called Companions, and so the biography currently runs to 28 volumes (over 30,000 pages), with another 3 document volumes still planned.
Michael Foot, reviewing a volume of Gilbert's biography of Churchill in the
New Statesman in 1971, praised his meticulous scholarship and wrote: "Whoever made the decision to make Martin Gilbert Churchill's biographer deserves a vote of thanks from the nation. Nothing less would suffice." In the 1960s, Gilbert compiled a number of historical
atlases. His other major works include a single-volume history on
the Holocaust, as well as the single-volume histories
First World War and
Second World War. He also wrote a three-volume series called
A History of the Twentieth Century. Gilbert described himself as an "archival historian" who made extensive use of
primary sources in his work. By the 1980s Gilbert's academic attention had also turned towards the
Refusenik movement in the
Soviet Union. Gilbert authored
Jews of Hope: The Plight of Soviet Jewry Today (1984) and
Shcharansky: Hero of Our Time (1986), and he presented on behalf of the
Soviet Jewry Movement in a variety of contexts, ranging from large forums such as formal representation before the
United Nations Commission on Human Rights to smaller forums such as an educational slideshow for the general public on behalf of the Soviet Jewry Information Centre. In 1995, Gilbert retired as a Fellow of Merton College but was made an Honorary Fellow. In 1999 he was awarded a
Doctor of Letters degree by the University of Oxford "for the totality of his published work". Gilbert was noted for his endorsement of
Bat Ye'or and her
Eurabia theory, providing a cover comment for her 2005 book, and has stated that the theory "is 100 percent accurate". One of Gilbert's last books, ''In Ishmael's House: A History of the Jews in Muslim Lands'' cited Ye'or with approval several times.
Public service Gilbert was appointed in June 2009 as a member of the British government's
inquiry into the Iraq War (headed by
Sir John Chilcot). His appointment to this inquiry was criticised in parliament by
William Hague,
Clare Short, and
George Galloway on the basis of scepticism over his neutrality, Gilbert having written in 2004 that
George W. Bush and
Tony Blair may in the future be esteemed to the same degree as Churchill and
Franklin D. Roosevelt. In an article for
The Independent on Sunday published in November 2009,
Oliver Miles, the former British ambassador to
Libya, objected to the presence of Gilbert and
Sir Lawrence Freedman on the committee partly because of their Jewish background and Gilbert's
Zionist sympathies. In a later interview, Gilbert saw Miles's attack as being motivated by
antisemitism. ==Reception==