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Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - UPSC MCQ


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30 Questions MCQ Test NCERT Based Tests for UPSC & State PSC Exams - Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5

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Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 1

Consider the following statements:

1. During the 18th century of Colonial rule, the pre-colonial commercial centre declined.

2. In pre-colonial towns separation between town and country was fluid.

Which of the following is/are correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 1
  • In most parts of the Western world, modern cities emerged during and due to Industrialisation. In Britain, for example, industrial cities like Leeds and Manchester grew rapidly in the 19th and 20th centuries. In the late 18th century, Calcutta, Bombay, and Madras rose in importance as Presidency cities, centres of British power in India.

  • At the same time, historically important ports and cities such as Machilipatnam, Surat, and Seringapatam declined. The historic Mughal imperial city of Delhi also became a dusty provincial town in the 19th century before it was rebuilt as the capital of British India.

  • Towns were often defined in opposition to rural areas. They came to represent specific forms of economic activities and cultures. In the countryside people subsisted by cultivating land, foraging in the forest, or rearing animals.

  • Towns by contrast were populated with artisans, traders, administrators and rulers. Towns dominated over the rural population, thriving on the surplus and taxes derived from agriculture.

  • Towns and cities were often fortified by walls which symbolised their separation from the countryside. However, the separation between town and country was fluid. Peasants travelled long distances on pilgrimage, passing through towns; they also flocked to towns during times of famine

Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 2

Which of the following monuments was built in Gujarati style to welcome King George V in 1911?

Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 2
  • Towards the beginning of the twentieth century a new hybrid architectural style developed which combined the Indian with the European. This was called Indo-Saracenic. “Indo” was shorthand for Hindu and “Saracen” was a term Europeans used to designate Muslim.

  • The inspiration for this style was medieval buildings in India with their domes, chhatris, jalis, and arches. By integrating Indian and European styles in public architecture the British wanted to prove that they were legitimate rulers of India.

  • The Gateway of India, built in the traditional Gujarati style to welcome King George V and Queen Mary to India in 1911.

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Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 3

The three Presidency cities Madras, Calcutta, Bombay were originally:

Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 3
  • The three big colonial cities Madras (Chennai), Calcutta (Kolkata) and Bombay (Mumbai), all three were originally fishing and weaving villages.

  • Bombay was given to the Company in 1661 by the English king, who had got it as part of his wife’s dowry from the king of Portugal. The Company established trading and administrative offices in each of these settlements.

Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 4

Which of the following towns was not an important centre of Mughal imperial administration and control?

Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 4
During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the towns built by the Mughals were famous for their concentration of populations, their monumental buildings and their imperial grandeur and wealth. Agra, Delhi and Lahore were important centres of imperial administration and control

Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 5

Writers' Building which later became a government office was situated in?

Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 5
The Writers' Building, often shortened to just Writers', is the secretariat building of the State Government of West Bengal in India. It is located in West Bengal's capital city of Kolkata.

Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 6

'Amar Katka' serialised between 1910, 1913 was based on?

Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 6
  • Binodini Dasi (1863-1941) was a pioneering figure in Bengali theatre in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and worked closely with the dramatist and director Girish Chandra Ghosh (1844-1912).

  • She was one of the prime movers behind the setting up of the Star Theatre (1883) in Calcutta which became a centre for famous productions. Between 1910 and 1913 she serialised her autobiography, Amar Katha (My Story).

Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 7

Which incident changed the British attitude towards planning of cities?

Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 7
  • The nature of the colonial city changed further in the mid-nineteenth century. After the Revolt of 1857 British attitudes in India were shaped by a constant fear of rebellion.

  • They felt that towns needed to be better defended, and white people had to live in more secure and segregated enclaves, away from the threat of the “natives”.

Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 8

Who was/were the architect(s) of Delhi?

Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 8
The two british architects Sir Herbert Baker and Sir Edwin Lutyens had executed the planning and architect of Delhi the contract of building the city was bestowed on Sobha Singh.

Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 9

Consider the following statements:

(1) To keep track of life in the growing cities colonial rule carried out regular surveys, gathered statistical data, and published various official reports.

(2) Colonial rule did not emphasize on mapping.

Which of the following statement(s) is/are correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 9
  • Colonial rule was based on the production of enormous amounts of data. The British kept detailed records of their trading activities in order to regulate their commercial affairs. To keep track of life in the growing cities, they carried out regular surveys, gathered statistical data, and published various official reports.

  • From the early years, the colonial government was keen on mapping. It felt that good maps were necessary to understand the landscape and know the topography

Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 10

Consider the following statements:

1. Indians were not allowed to hold any position in Municipal Corporation.

2. Census Data became an invaluable source for studying urbanisation in India.

Which of the following statement(s) is/are not correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 10
From the late nineteenth century the British tried to raise money for administering towns through the systematic annual collection of municipal taxes. To avoid conflict they handed over some responsibilities to elected Indian representatives. The growth of cities was monitored through regular headcounts.
  • By the mid nineteenth century several local censuses had been carried out in different regions. The first all-India census was attempted in 1872. Thereafter, from 1881, decennial (conducted every ten years) censuses became a regular feature. This collection of data is an invaluable source for studying urbanisation in India.

  • Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 11

    Consider the following with respect to 1937 election:

    1. Muslim league captured majority of seats in North West Frontier Province.

    2. Congress performed badly in constituencies reserved for muslims.

    Which of the following is/are correct?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 11
    • In 1937, elections to the provincial legislatures were held for the first time. Only about 10 to 12 percent of the population enjoyed the right to vote.

    • The Congress did well in the elections, winning an absolute majority in five out of eleven provinces and forming governments in seven of them. It did badly in the constituencies reserved for Muslims, but the Muslim League also fared poorly, polling only 4.4 per cent of the total Muslim vote cast in this election.

    • The League failed to win a single seat in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) and could capture only two out of 84 reserved constituencies in the Punjab and three out of 33 in Sindh.

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 12

    Which of the following statements is not correct regarding the Lucknow pact?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 12
    All are correct except D as the Khilafat issue was raised after the end of World War I (1918). But the Lucknow pact was signed in 1916. So, technically option d is wrong.

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 13

    Which act was considered as the first step towards communal politics in India?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 13
    Indian Council Act of 1909 is also known as Morley Minto Reform and it was the first step towards communal politics as for the first time separate electorate was introduced

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 14

    Why Congress rejected the offer to form coalition in United Provinces with Muslim league?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 14
    In the United Provinces, the party had rejected the Muslim League proposal for a coalition government partly because the League tended to support landlordism, which the Congress wished to abolish, although the party had not yet taken any concrete steps in that direction.

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 15

    According to whom, events of 1947 were intimately connected to the long history of HinduMuslim conflict throughout medieval and modern times?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 15
    Muhammad Ali Jinnah had put the theory of of saparate nation but he never stated that he never stated that roots of this theory lies in the events happened in medieval and modern times. So, this perception was created by Historians, both Indian and Pakistani.

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 16

    Who proposed the idea of Muslim majority autonomous region with India for the first time?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 16
    • The origins of the Pakistan demand have also been traced back to the Urdu poet Mohammad Iqbal, the writer of “Sare Jahan Se Achha Hindustan Hamara”.

    • In his presidential address to the Muslim League in 1930, the poet spoke of a need for a “NorthWest Indian Muslim state”. Iqbal, however, was not visualising the emergence of a new country in that speech but a reorganisation of Muslim-majority.

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 17

    Who voiced the idea of Pakistan in his pamphlet entitled 'Now or Never; Are We to Live or Perish Forever?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 17
    • Choudhary Rahmat Ali was a Pakistani nationalist who was one of the earliest proponents of the creation of the state of Pakistan.

    • He is credited with creating the name "Pakistan" for a separate Muslim homeland in South Asia and is generally known as the originator of the Pakistan Movement. Rahmat Ali's seminal contribution was when he was a law student at the University of Cambridge in 1933, in the form of a pamphlet "Now or Never; Are We to Live or Perish Forever?", also known as the "Pakistan Declaration"

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 18

    Who among them came forward to restore Communal harmony during 1946-47 riots?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 18
    During riots there was a complete breakdown of authority in the city. British officials did not know how to handle the situation: they were unwilling to take decisions, and hesitant to intervene. When panic-stricken people appealed for help, British officials asked them to contact Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, Vallabh Bhai Patel or M.A. Jinnah. Nobody knew who could exercise authority and power. The top leadership of the Indian parties, barring Mahatma Gandhi, were involved in negotiations regarding independence while many Indian civil servants in the affected provinces feared for their own lives and property.

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 19

    Which of the following gave the proposal of grouping Provincial Assemblies into three 3 sections A, B, C?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 19
    • In March 1946 the British Cabinet sent a three member mission to Delhi to examine the League’s demand and to suggest a suitable political framework for a free India.

    • The Cabinet Mission toured the country for three months and recommended a loose three-tier confederation. India was to remain united.

    • It was to have a weak central government controlling only foreign affairs, defence and communications with the existing provincial assemblies being grouped into three sections while electing the constituent assembly: Section A for the Hindu majority provinces, and Sections B and C for the Muslim-majority provinces of the north-west and the north-east (including Assam) respectively.

    • The sections or groups of provinces would comprise various regional units. They would have the power to set up intermediate-level executives and legislatures of their own.

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 20

    Which region of India was dominated by the Unionist Party during 1923-47?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 20
    Unionist party was a political party representing the interests of landholders Hindu, Muslim and Sikh – in the Punjab. The party was particularly powerful during the period 1923-47. The party was secular in nature and believed in a strong and united Punjabi entity, bringing together Muslims, Hindus, Sikhs and other communities of this province.

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 21

    Consider the following facts about Mahatma Gandhi:

    1. In January 1917, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi returned to his homeland after two decades of residence abroad.

    2. Mahatma Gandhi went South Africa as a lawyer, and became a leader of the Indian community in that territory.

    3. It was in South Africa that Mahatma Gandhi first forged the distinctive techniques of nonviolent protest known as satyagraha, first promoted harmony between religions, and first alerted upper-caste Indians to their discriminatory treatment of low castes and women.

    Which of the following is/are correct?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 21
    • In January 1915, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi returned to his homeland after two decades of residence abroad. These years had been spent for the most part in South Africa, where he went as a lawyer, and in time became a leader of the Indian community in that territory.

    • As the historian Chandran Devanesan has remarked, South Africa was “the making of the Mahatma”. It was in South Africa that Mahatma Gandhi first forged the distinctive techniques of nonviolent protest known as satyagraha, first promoted harmony between religions, and first alerted upper-caste Indians to their discriminatory treatment of low castes and women.

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 22

    Consider the following statements:

    (a) Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru promised Congress support to the war effort if the British, in return, promised to grant India independence once hostilities ended.

    (b) Congress organised a series of individual satyagrahas to pressure the rulers to accept Congress as representative of the whole India.

    Which of the following is/are correct?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 22
    • In September 1939, two years after the Congress ministries assumed office, the Second World War broke out. Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru had both been strongly critical of Hitler and the Nazis.

    • Accordingly, they promised Congress support to the war effort if the British, in return, promised to grant India independence once hostilities ended. The offer was refused. In protest, the Congress ministries resigned in October 1939.

    • Through 1940 and 1941, the Congress organised a series of individual satyagrahas to pressure the rulers to promise freedom once the war had ended.

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 23

    "Direct Action Day" is associated with?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 23
    • A Cabinet Mission sent in the summer of 1946 failed to get the Congress and the League to agree on a federal system that would keep India together while allowing the provinces a degree of autonomy.

    • After the talks broke down, Jinnah called for a “Direct Action Day” to press the League’s demand for Pakistan. On the designated day, 16 August 1946, bloody riots broke out in Calcutta.

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 24

    Consider the following statements:

    1. Political polarisation was witnessed in 1946 general elections.

    2. Lord Wavell was viceroy of India during the 1946 general election.

    Which of the following is/are correct?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 24
    • Viceroy, Lord Wavell, brought the Congress and the League together for a series of talks. Early in 1946 fresh elections were held to the provincial legislatures. The Congress swept the “General” category, but in the seats specifically reserved for Muslims the League won an overwhelming majority. The political polarisation was complete.

    • A Cabinet Mission sent in the summer of 1946 failed to get the Congress and the League to agree on a federal system that would keep India together while allowing the provinces a degree of autonomy. However in February 1947, Wavell was replaced as Viceroy by Lord Mountbatten.

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 25

    Why the Quit India Movement was launched?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 25
    • Conservative Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, was a diehard imperialist who insisted that he had not been appointed the King’s First Minister in order to preside over the liquidation of the British Empire.

    • In the spring of 1942, Churchill was persuaded to send one of his ministers, Sir Stafford Cripps, to India to try and forge a compromise with Gandhiji and the Congress. Talks broke down, however, after the Congress insisted that if it was to help the British defend India from the Axis powers, then the Viceroy had first to appoint an Indian as the Defence Member of his Executive Council.After the failure of the Cripps Mission, Mahatma Gandhi decided to launch his third major movement against British rule. This was the “Quit India” campaign, which began in August 1942

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 26

    In context of Gandhi - Irwin pact which of the following is not correct?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 26
    • By the terms of “Gandhi-Irwin Pact’ - civil disobedience would be called off, all prisoners released, and salt manufacture allowed along the coast. The pact was criticised by radical nationalists, for Gandhiji was unable to obtain from the Viceroy a commitment to political independence for Indians; he could obtain merely an assurance of talks towards that possible end.

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 27

    Who persuaded Mahatma Gandhi not to restrict the protests to men alone?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 27
    • The socialist activist Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay had persuaded Gandhiji not to restrict the protests to men alone. Kamaladevi was herself one of numerous women who courted arrest by breaking the salt or liquor laws. Third, and perhaps most significant, it was the Salt March which forced upon the British the realisation that their Raj would not last forever, and that they would have to devolve some power to the Indians.

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 28

    Consider the following statements:

    The Non-Cooperation Movement led to the -

    1. Congress became a mass movement for the first time.

    2. Growth of Hindu-Muslim unity.

    3. Removal of fear of the British 'might' from the minds of the people.

    4. British Government's willingness to grant political concessions to Indians.

    Of these statements:

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 28
    The Non-Cooperation Movement launched in August, 1920 by Mahatma Gandhi, saw for the first time, Hindu Muslim Unity in a big way and removed the fear of the British "might" from the minds of the people.

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 29

    Consider the following statements regarding Gandhiji’s countrywide campaign against the “Rowlatt Act”:

    (1) In towns across North and West India, life came to a standstill, as shops shut down and schools closed in response to the bandh call.

    (2) The protests were particularly intense in Punjab, where many men had served on the British side in the War – expecting to be rewarded for their service.

    (3) Gandhiji was detained while proceeding to Punjab, even as prominent local Congressmen were arrested.

    Which of the following statement(s) is/are correct?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 29
    • During the Great War of 1914-18, the British had instituted censorship of the press and permitted detention without trial. Now, on the recommendation of a committee chaired by Sir Sidney Rowlatt, these tough measures were continued.

    • In response, Gandhiji called for a countrywide campaign against the “Rowlatt Act”. In towns across North and West India, life came to a standstill, as shops shut down and schools closed in response to the bandh call. The protests were particularly intense in Punjab, where many men had served on the British side in the War – expecting to be rewarded for their service. Instead they were given the Rowlatt Act.

    • Gandhiji was detained while proceeding to Punjab, even as prominent local Congressmen were arrested. The situation in the province grew progressively tenser, reaching a bloody climax in Amritsar in April 1919, when a British Brigadier ordered his troops to open fire on a nationalist meeting.

    Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 30

    Consider the following statements:

    1. Muslim league

    2. Indian princes

    3. B. R. Ambedkar

    Who among them recognised Congress as representative of the whole India in the 2nd Round Table Conference, 1931?

    Detailed Solution for Test: Class 12 History NCERT Based- 5 - Question 30
    • Second Round Table Conference was held in London in the latter part of 1931. Here, Gandhiji represented the Congress.

    • However, his claims that his party represented all of India came under challenge from three parties: from the Muslim League, which claimed to stand for the interests of the Muslim minority; from the Princes, who claimed that the Congress had no stake in their territories; and from the brilliant lawyer and thinker B.R. Ambedkar, who argued that Gandhiji and the Congress did not really represent the lowest castes.

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