Tag: history

Questions Related to history

Growers of woad in Europe saw __________ as a crop which would provide competition to their earnings.

  1. Cotton

  2. Tobacco

  3. Chilli

  4. Indigo


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

By the thirteenth century Indian indigo was being used by cloth manufacturers in Italy, France and Britain to dye cloth. However, only small amounts of Indian indigo reached the European market and its price was very high. European cloth manufacturers therefore had to depend on another plant called woad to make violet and blue dyes. Being a plant of the temperate zones, woad was more easily available in Europe. It was grown in northern Italy, southern France and in parts of Germany and Britain. Worried by the competition from indigo, woad producers in Europe pressurised their governments to ban the import of indigo.

The demand for indigo increased in the late-eighteenth-century in Britain because of __________.

  1. Colonisation

  2. Industrialisation

  3. Imperialism

  4. Socialism


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

The demand for indigo increased in late -eighteenth-century Britain because of the expansion of cotton production as a result of industrialisation, which in turn created an enormous demand for cloth dyes.

Birsa urged his followers to purify themselves, give up drinking liquor and stop believing in witchcraft and sorcery.

  1. True

  2. False


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Birsa was deeply influenced by many of the ideas he came in touch with in his growing-up years. His movement was aimed at reforming tribal society. He urged the Mundas to give up drinking liquor, clean their village, and stop believing in witchcraft and sorcery.

Jhum cultivators plough the land and sow seeds.

  1. True

  2. False


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

Jhum cultivation is also called shifting cultivation. This was done on small patches of land, mostly in forests. The cultivators cut the treetops to allow sunlight to reach the ground, and burnt the vegetation on the land to clear it for cultivation. They spread the ash from the firing, which contained potash, to fertilise the soil. They used the axe to cut trees and the hoe to scratch the soil in order to prepare it for cultivation. They broadcast the seeds, that is, scattered the seeds on the field instead of ploughing the land and sowing the seeds. Once the crop was ready and harvested, they moved to another field. A field that had been cultivated once was left fallow for several years, Shifting cultivators were found in the hilly and forested tracts of north-east and central India. 

Cocoons were bought from the Santhals and sold by the traders at five times the purchase price.

  1. True

  2. False


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Hazaribagh, in present-day Jharkhand, was an area where the Santhals reared cocoons. The traders dealing in silk sent in their agents who gave loans to the tribal people and collected the cocoons. The growers were paid Rs 3 to Rs 4 for a thousand cocoons. These were then exported to Burdwan or Gaya where they were sold at five times the price. 

Tribal people went to work in the ____________ of Assam and the ____________ in Bihar.

  1. Tea plantations, Gold mines

  2. Gold mines, Coal mines

  3. Coffee plantations, Rubber plantation

  4. Tea plantations, Coal mines


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

From the late nineteenth century, tea plantations started coming up and mining became an important industry. Tribals were recruited in large numbers to work the tea plantations of Assam and the coal mines of Jharkhand. They were recruited through contractors who paid them miserably low wages and prevented them from returning home.

The British wanted to preserve the tribal way of life.
  1. True

  2. False


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

The British did not want to preserve the tribal way of life.

Birsa wanted from the government to set up _________.

  1. Munda-Raj

  2. Munda rebellion 

  3. Bodo  movement 

  4. None of the above 


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Birsa also wanted people to once again work on their land, settle down and cultivate their fields. What worried British officials most was the political aim of the Birsa movement, for it wanted to drive out missionaries, moneylenders, Hindu landlords, and the government and set up a Munda Raj with Birsa at its head. The movement identified all these forces as the cause of the misery the Mundas were suffering. The land policies of the British were destroying their traditional land system, Hindu landlords and moneylenders were taking over their land, and missionaries were criticising their traditional culture.

The indigo plant is used in making a dye for ______. 

  1. textiles

  2. steel making

  3. coal refining

  4. oil refinaries


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Bengal indigo was very popular all over the world.  Indigo planting became more and more commercially profitable because of the demand for blue dye in Europe which was made from the indigo plant. These dyes were very expensive and only the Roman Emperors and the very wealthy could afford them. In 1810, 95% of indigo imported in Britain was from India.

Coorg became well known for its ______plantations. 

  1. tea 

  2. wheat 

  3. orange 

  4. cotton


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Coorg is a hill station in the Karnataka State of India. It is very famous for its tea and coffee plantations in India. Along with that, it is also known for its exotic greenery and natural beauty.