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Test: History - 1 - UPSC MCQ


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30 Questions MCQ Test - Test: History - 1

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Test: History - 1 - Question 1

Consider the following regions of ancient Indian history:

1. Kosala

2. Magadha

3. Gandhara

4. Avanti

5. Panchala

Which of the above was/were the ‘Mahajanapadas’?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 1

Mahajanapadas - The Mahajanapadas were the set of sixteen kingdoms that existed in ancient India. About 2500 years ago, some janapadas or states became more important than other states and were known as mahajanapadas. Some of the Mahajanapadas were Magadha, Gandhara, Kuru, Kamboja, Kosala, Panchala,

Vajji, Kashi etc.

Most mahajanapadas had a capital city, many of these were fortified. This means that huge

wall of wood, brick or stone were built around them.

Test: History - 1 - Question 2

Consider the following statements regarding the administration of Mahajanapadas:

  1. Forts were built to protect land and people.

  2. The rajas of Mahajanapadas started to maintain armies and regularly paid soldiers.

  3. Instead of receiving gifts, regular taxes were levied by the states.

  4. In agriculture, iron ploughs were used and paddy transplanting was started.

Select the correct answer using the code given below:

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 2
  • Special features of Mahajanpadas Administration Forts were probably built because people were afraid of attacks from other kings and needed protection.

  • Some rulers wanted to show how rich and powerful they were by building really large,

  • tall and impressive walls around their cities.

  • The land and the people living inside the fortified area could be controlled more easily by the king by building forts.

  • Building such huge walls required a great deal of planning including resources, labours etc. The new rajas now began maintaining armies.

  • Soldiers were paid regular salaries and maintained by the king throughout the year.

  • The Mahajanapadas started to collect regular taxes.

  • Changes took place in agriculture like the use of iron ploughshares and transplanting paddy.

  • Generally, slave men and women, (dasas and dasis) and landless agricultural labourers (kammakaras) had to do agricultural work.

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Test: History - 1 - Question 3

Consider the following statements regarding ancient India:

1. The word India comes from the Indus, called Sindhu in Sanskrit.

2. The name Bharata was used for a group of people who lived in the northwest, and who are mentioned in the Rigveda.

Which of the statements given above is/are NOT Correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 3
The names of the land in the past were kept differently in comparison to today’s time. Our country is often called as Bharat as well as India. These two words have a different origin. The word India comes from the Indus, called Sindhu in Sanskrit. The Iranians and the

Greeks who came through the northwest about 2500 years ago and were familiar with the Indus, called it the Hindos or the Indos, and the land to the east of the river was called India. The name Bharata was used for a group of people who lived in the northwest, and who are mentioned in the Rigveda.

Test: History - 1 - Question 4

With reference to the Battle of Haldighati, consider the following statements:

1. It was fought between Maharana Pratap and Mughal forces led by Raja Man Singh.

2. Aftermath of the battle, Goganda, Udaipur, and Kumbhalgarh were all under Maharana Pratap’s control.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 4
Statement 1 is correct: It was fought in the year 1576 between Maharana Pratap and Mughal forces led by Raja Man Singh of Amber (general of the Mughal emperor Akbar). Maharana Pratap bravely fought the war but eventually lost it. According to some mythological texts, Chetak who was Maharana Pratap’s loyal horse, also gave up his life when Maharana Pratap was leaving the battlefield. Maharana re-gathered his forces, fought and won against the Mughals after six years in 1582.

Statement 2 is not correct: After the battle, Maharana Pratap able to make a successful escape, the battle failed to break the deadlock between the two powers. Subsequently, Akbar led a sustained campaign against the Rana, and soon, Goganda, Udaipur, and Kumbhalgarh were all under Akbar’s control

Test: History - 1 - Question 5

Which of the following statements is/are correct about Shankaracharya?

1. Shankaracharya wrote the commentaries on the Upanishads and the Bhagavad Gita.

2. His philosophical views came to be known as Advaita Vedanta.

3. Shankaracharya expounded that ultimate reality is one, it being the Brahman.

Select the correct answer using the code given below:

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 5
  • Shankaracharya wrote the commentaries on the Upanishads, Brahmasutras and the Bhagavad Gita.

  • Shankaracharya’s discourse or his philosophical views came to be known as Advaita Vedanta. Advaita literally means non-dualism or belief in one reality.

  • Shankaracharya expounded that ultimate reality is one, it being the Brahman.

  • According to the Vedanta philosophy, ‘Brahman is true, the world is false and self and Brahman is not different, Shankaracharya believed that the Brahman is existent,unchanging, the highest truth and the ultimate knowledge.

  • He also believed that there is no distinction between Brahman and self. The knowledge of Brahman is the essence of all things and the ultimate existence. Ramanuja was another well-known Advaita scholar.

Test: History - 1 - Question 6

Which of the following sources refers tothe worshippers of Vasudeva (Krishna)?

1. Panini’s Ashtadhyayi

2. The Chhandogya Upanishad

Select the correct answer using the code given below:

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 6
  • A Sutra in Panini’s Ashtadhyayi refers to the worshippers of Vasudeva (Krishna).

  • The Chhandogya Upanishad also speaks of Krishna, the son of Devaki, a pupil of the sage Ghora Angirasa, who was a sun-worshipping priest.

  • A large number of people worshipped Vasudeva Krishna exclusively as their personal God and they were at first known as Bhagavatas.

  • The Vasudeva-Bhagavata cult grew steadily, absorbing within its fold other Vedic and Brahminic divinities, like Vishnu (primarily an aspect of the Sun) and Narayana (a cosmic God).

  • From the late Gupta period the name mostly used to designate this Bhakti cult was Vaishnava, indicating the predominance of the Vedic Vishnu element in it with emphasis on the doctrine of incarnations (Avataras).

Test: History - 1 - Question 7

This temple is built in Chalukyan Style on the Prabhas Pattan or Veraval Port of Gujrat. It was raided by Mahmud of Ghazni and is believed to have been plundered at least 17 times. India’s first president Dr Rajendra Prasad performed the Pran Pratishtha Ceremony over here. Which is the temple being referred to in the above paragraph?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 7
Somnath Temple:
  • It is the first among the 12 Jyotirlingas which are symbolic representations of Lord Shiva.

  • Located at the Veraval Port or Prabhas Pattan in Saurashtra, Gujrat, the present temple is built in the Chalukyan style.

    • This Architecture is also known as the “Kailash Mahameru Prasad” style.

    • It reflects the skill of the SompuraSalats, one of Gujarat’s master masons.

  • Raids - In AD 1026, Mahmud of Ghazni first looted the temple,and then came Afzal Khan, the commander of Ala-ud-din Khilji and later Aurangzeb.

  • It is said that the temple was looted and destroyed as many as seventeen times.

  • Post Modern History - The Iron man of India, Sardar Vallabh Bhai Patel was instrumental in the construction of the present temple.

  • The first President of India Dr Rajendra Prasad installed the Jyotirling in the new temple on May 11, 1951.

Test: History - 1 - Question 8

With reference to recent findings of the excavation at Mayiladumparai, consider the following statements :

1. The site is located in modern-day Tamil Nadu.

2. The site is linked to the Paleolithic age alone.

Which of the statements given above is/are not correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 8
Carbon dating of findings of excavation in Tamil Nadu bring forth evidence of iron being used in India 4,200 years ago. Option b is correct: Excavations at a small hamlet called Mayiladumparai which is in Tamil Nadu have pushed back the date since iron has been used in India. It is linked to the Iron age and Neolithic ages.
Test: History - 1 - Question 9

Consider the following statements regarding ancient India:

1. The word India comes from the Indus, called Sindhu in Sanskrit.

2. The name Bharata was used for a group of people who lived in the northwest, and who are mentioned in the Rigveda.

Which of the statements given above is/are NOT correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 9
The names of the land in the past were kept differently in comparison to today’s time. Our country is often called as Bharat as well as India. These two words have a different origin. The word India comes from the Indus, called Sindhu in Sanskrit. The Iranians and the

Greeks who came through the northwest about 2500 years ago and were familiar with the Indus, called it the Hindos or the Indos, and the land to the east of the river was called India. The name Bharata was used for a group of people who lived in the northwest, and who are mentioned in the Rigveda.

Test: History - 1 - Question 10

With respect to the political organization in the Vedic period, which of the following

statements is/are correct?

1. The term Visu is synonymous with a village during the Vedic period.

2. Bharata was a tribal kingdom during the Vedic period.

3. Sabha was a general assembly of the entire population.

Select the correct answer using the code given below:

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 10
The Vedic literature consists of the four Vedas – Rig, Yajur, Sama and Atharva. The Sama Veda is set to tune for the purpose of chanting during sacrifice. It is called the book of chants and the origins of Indian music are traced in it. Besides the Vedas, there are other sacred works, like the Brahmanas, the Upanishads, the Aranyakas and the epics Ramayana and Mahabharata. The Brahmanas are the treatises relating to prayer and sacrificialceremony. The Upanishads are philosophical texts dealing with topics like the soul, the absolute, the origin of the world and the mysteries of nature.

The Aranyakas are called forest books and they deal with mysticism, rites, rituals and sacrifices.

Test: History - 1 - Question 11

Which of the following statements is/are correct about the currency reforms of Muhammad-Bin-Tughlaq?

1. Token currency was introduced for the first time ever in the history during his reign.

2. He introduced a bronze coin with the same value as the silver tanka.

Select the correct answer using the code given below:

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 11
  • Another step which Muhammad-Bin- Tughlaq took at this time was the introduction of the ‘token currency’. Since money is merely a medium of exchange, all countries in the world today have token currencies - generally paper currency, so that they do not have to depend upon the supply of gold and silver. There was a shortage of silver in the world in the fourteenth century. Moreover, Qublai Khan of China had already successfully experimented with a token currency.

  • A Mongol ruler of Iran, Ghazan Khan, had also experimented with it. Muhammad Tughlaq decided to introduce a bronze coin which was to have the same value as the silver tanka. Specimen of this coin has been found in different parts of India, and can be seen in museums. The idea of a token currency was a new one in India and it was difficult to induce the traders, as well as the common man to accept it.

Test: History - 1 - Question 12

Devasnana purnima, chariot festival is related to which of the following temples?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 12
The Odisha government’s ambitious temple corridor project in Puri has become a subject of political controversy.

Jagannath Puri Temple:

  • Devasnana Purnima – The annual bathing ritual, where the holy trinity is brought out from their sanctum seated in a raised platform and bathed with purified water drawn from a well within thetemple premises.

  • Chariot Festival – This happens during the month of June/July. During the festival, the Lord comes out to the street to greet his devotees, people irrespective of caste, creed & colour can seek his blessings.

Test: History - 1 - Question 13

Consider the following statements:

1. The condition of women was the same during the Vedic and the later Vedic periods.

2. The Later Vedic period saw a rise in the extent of kingdoms as opposed to the Rig Vedic period.

3. The prominence of Indra faded during the later Vedic period and instead, importance was given to Prajapati.

4. The pattern of social system (Varna) continued as it is from the Rig Vedic to the Later Vedic period.

Which of the statements given above are correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 13
  • During the Vedic period, women were given equal opportunities as men for their spiritual and intellectual development. There were women poetesses like Apala, Viswavara, Ghosa and Lopamudra during the Rig Vedic period. Women could even attend the popular assemblies. There was no child marriage and the practice of sati was absent.

  • However, with the transition to the later Vedic period, the position of women declined, as the society became more patriarchal. Women also lost their political rights of attending assemblies. Child marriages had become common. According the Aitreya Brahmana, a daughter has been described as a source of misery. However, the women in the royal household enjoyed certain privileges. The social divisions were not rigid during the Rig Vedic period, as it was in the later Vedic period. Larger kingdoms were formed during the later Vedic period.

  • The four divisions of society (Brahmins, Kshatriyas, Vaisyas and Sudras) or the Varna system was thoroughly established during the Later Vedic period. The two higher classes - Brahmana and Kshatriya enjoyed privileges that were denied to the Vaisya and Sudra. Many sub- castes, on the basis of their occupation appeared in this period. The two outstanding Rig Vedic gods, Indra and Agni, lost their former importance. On the other hand, Prajapati, the creator, came to occupy the supreme position in the later Vedic period.

Test: History - 1 - Question 14

Which of the following statements is/are correct about the currency reforms of Muhammad-Bin-Tughlaq?

1. Token currency was introduced for the first time ever in the history during his reign.

2. He introduced a bronze coin with the same value as the silver tanka.

Select the correct answer using the code given below:

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 14
  • Another step which Muhammad-Bin- Tughlaq took at this time was the introduction of the ‘token currency’. Since money is merely a medium of exchange, all countries in the world today have token currencies — generally paper currency, so that they do not have to depend upon the supply of gold and silver. There was a shortage of silver in the world in the fourteenth century. Moreover, Qublai Khan of China had already successfully experimented with a token currency. A Mongol ruler of Iran, Ghazan Khan, had also experimented with it.

  • Muhammad Tughlaq decided to introduce a bronze coin which was to have the same value as the silver tanka. Specimen of this coin has been found in different parts of India, and can be seen in museums. The idea of a token currency was a new one in India and it was difficult to induce the traders, as well as the common man to accept it.

Test: History - 1 - Question 15

Consider the following pairs:

1. Dadu Dayal: Madhya Pradesh

2. Ravi Das: Punjab

3. Bhagat Pipa: Bihar

Which of the pairs given above are correctly matched?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 15
Bhagat Pipa was a Rajput prince born in Gagron, Jhalawar. He was a prince who renounced his throne in the search of spiritual solace and said that one should search within for God. He said that one's inner self has a relation with God. Bhagat Pipa shared same views as Guru Nanak. Bhagat Pipa’s hymns are included in the Guru Granth Sahib. He settled in near Kutch, Gujarat. Ravi Das was a mystic saint poet during the 15th and 16th century. He came from a shudra family which worked with dead animals’ skins to produce leather products and very much known in India as untouchables. He was one of the disciples of bhakti saint poet Ramananda. His devotional songs are included in Guru Granth Sahib. Panch Vani text of Dadupanthi tradition also includes numerous poems of Ravidas. He was born and died in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh.
Test: History - 1 - Question 16

With reference to Qutub Minar, consider the following statements:

1.  Qutb-ud-din Aibak completed the construction of Minar.

2. Red sandstone are used in its construction.

3. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Which of the statements given above is/are not correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 16
  • Qutub-ud-din completed the construction of Minar: This statement is incorrect. Qutub-ud-din Aibak began the construction of the Qutub Minar, but it was completed by his successor, Iltutmish.

  • Red sandstone  are used in its construction: This statement is correct. The Qutub Minar is primarily made of red sandstone.

  • It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site: This statement is correct. The Qutub Minar was designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1993.

 

Test: History - 1 - Question 17

Consider the following statements regarding ‘Sangam Literature’:

1. The Sangam literature was composed by the assemblies of Tamil poets.

2. The achievements of three powerful kingdoms i.e. Chera, Chola and Pallava were praised in the Sangam works.

3. The Sangam literature was composed during the four Sangam assemblies.

Which of the statement given below is/are correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 17
  • Sangam literature Some of the earliest works in Tamil, known as Sangam literature, were composed around 2300 years ago. These texts were called Sangam because they were supposed to have been composed and compiled in assemblies (known as sangams) of poets that were held in the city of Madurai.

  • The period in which the Sangam literature was composed is called Sangam Age. The three kingdoms Chera, Chola and Pandya flourished during this period. There were three Sangams which created a literary movement. The Sangam literature consists of Tolkappiyam, Ettutogai, Pattuppattu, Pathinenkilkanakku and the two epics Silappathigaram and Manimegalai. Among these, the Tolkappiyam authored by Tolkappiyar was the earliest work which provides the information on Social, Economic and political conditions of the Sangam Age along with the Tamil grammar.

  • It was composed in the second Sangam. The third Sangam created Patthupattu, (Ten Idylls or poetries), Ettuthokai (The eight Anthologies), Padinenkilkanakkyu (The Eight Minor Didactic Poems), the Rural and Jivaka Chintamani etc. The Sangam literature speaks of the worship of Vishnu, Siva and Indra.

Test: History - 1 - Question 18

Consider the following pairs:

1. Ain-e-Akbari: Minhaj-us-Siraj

2. Tabaqat-i-Nasiri: Badauni

Which of the pairs given above is/are correctly matched?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 18
  • Abul Fazl’s Akbarnamah and Ain-e- Akbari are fine piece of literature. From there we get a good deal of information about Akbar and his times.

  • Minhaj-us-Siraj was a historian who was patronized by Slave Sultan Nasir- ud-din Mahmud to whom he dedicated his magnum opus Tabaqat- i-Nasiri.

Test: History - 1 - Question 19

Consider the following statements about Vallabhacharya:

1. His philosophy is known as Shuddha Advaita.

2. He propounded the Pustimarga.

3. He was instrumental in establishing

the Srinathji Temple at Nathdwara in Rajasthan.

Which of the statements given above are correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 19
Vallabhacharya (1479-1531), was an Indian Telugu Philosopher, who founded the Krishna centered Pushti sect of Vaishavism in the Braj region of India. His philosophy is called Shuddha Advaita (Pure Non-dualism). Pushtimarga (Path of Grace) is a Vaishnav sect of Hinduism, founded by Vallabhacharya around 1500 AD. It belived that because the Lord is accessible only through His own grace. The Lord cannot be attained by a given formula - He is attainable only if He wants to be attained! The sect established by him is unique in its facets of devotion to Krishna, especially his child manifestation, and is enriched with the use of traditions, music and festivals. Ashtachhap was group of 8 poets established by Vallabhacharya who by their writings eulogized various facets of life of Sri Krishna.

1. Kumbhandas

2. Surdas

3. Krishnadas (Shudra by caste)

4. Parmanand Das

5. Govindswami

6. Cheetswami

7. Nand Das

8. Chaturbhuj Das

Test: History - 1 - Question 20

With reference to ‘Viharas’, consider the following statements:

1. The land on which the viharas were built was donated by rich merchants or the king.

2. Viharas were the permanent shelters for monks where they can stay while travelling for teachings.

3. The Viharas found in western India were made of wood and bricks.

Which of the given statement is/ are correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 20

The Viharas found in western India were found to be dug out in hills.

Enrich Your Learning: Viharas The monasteries build as a permanent shelter for monks (they used to travel for teachings) were known as Viharas. Many supporters of the monks and nuns, and monk themselves felt the need for more permanent shelters and so monasteries were built. The earliest Viharas were made of wood, and then of brick. Some of the Viharas were even in caves that were dug out in hills, especially in western India. The land on which the vihara was built was donated by a rich merchant or a landowner, or the king. The local people came with gifts of food, clothing and medicines for the monks and nuns. In return, they taught the people.

Example: Cave in Karle present in Maharashtra.

Test: History - 1 - Question 21

Which of the following statements is/are correct with respect to Bindusara?

1. Bindusara is known to have made a gift of elephants to Selukas, Alexander’s ambassador.

2. He was called as Amitragatha (slayer of enemies) by the Greeks.

3. He was assisted by Kautilya in his administration.

Select the correct answer using the code below:

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 21

In 305 B.C., Chandragupta Maurya marched against Selukas Niketar, who was Alexander’s General controlling the north western India. Chandragupta Maurya defeated him and a treaty was signed. By this treaty, Selukas Niketar ceded the trans-Indus territories – namely Aria, Arakosia and Gedrosia – to the Mauryan Empire. He also gave his daughter in marriage to the Mauryan prince. Chandragupta made a gift of 500 elephants to Selukas. Chandragupta Maurya was the founder of the Mauryan Empire. He, at a young age, captured Pataliputra from the last ruler of the Nanda dynasty, Dhanananda. In this task, he was assisted by Kautilya, who was also known as Chanakya or Vishnugupta wherein the latter then became his most trusted advisor.

Test: History - 1 - Question 22

Consider the following statements about the Alvars:

1. The Alvars were the devotees of Shiva.

2. The hymns of the Alvars are compiled in Nalayira Divyaprabandhanam.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 22
  • The Alvars composed moving hymns addressed to Vishnu. They were compiled in the Nalayira Divyaprabandhanam by Nadamuni, at the end of the ninth century. Bhakti cult, as a religious movement, opened a new chapter in the history of Tamilnadu in the early medieval period.

  • A strong wave of Tamil devotionalism swept the country from the sixth through the ninth centuries. The form was in hymns of the Nayanmars and the Alvars. The saints of Saivism and Vaishnavism simplified the use of Tamil language with the application of music. They brought the local and regional ethos into the mainstream.

  • Azhwars (totally 12) and Nayanmars (totally 63), came from different strata of the Tamil society, such as artisans and cultivators. There were women saints as well, like Andal, an Alvar saint. The themes are mostly Krishna’s childhood. Krishna is the hero in Andal’s hymns. Her songs convey her abiding love for Krishna. Nammalvar, from Kurugur (Alvar Tirunagari), now in Thoothukudi district, is considered the greatest amongst Alvars. Nammalvar authored four works that include the Tiruvaymoli. Vaishnava devotees believe that his hymns distil the essence of the four Vedas.

Test: History - 1 - Question 23

Consider the following statements:

1. The chiefs of Southern coastal kingdoms did not collect regular taxes.

2. Satvahanas were also known as lords of the

dakshinapatha, a route leading to South.

3. Sangam poems mention a Tamil word ‘muvendar’ which means sacred river.

Which of the following statements given above is/are correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 23
Sangam poems mention the muvendar, a Tamil word meaning three chiefs of the Cholas, Cheras, and Pandyas who became powerful in south India around 2300 years ago.

Enrich Your Learning:

  • New kingdoms along the coasts of India Each of the three chiefs of the Cholas, Cheras, and Pandyas had two centres of power: one inland, and one on the coast. Of the six cities, two were very important: Puhar or Kaveripattinam, the port of the Cholas, and Madurai, the capital of the Pandyas. The chiefs did not collect regular taxes. Instead, they demanded and received gifts from the people. They also went on military expeditions and collected tribute from neighbouring areas. They kept some of the wealth and distributed the rest amongst their supporters, including members of their family, soldiers, and poets.

  • Many poets whose compositions are found in the Sangam collection composed poems in praise of chiefs who often rewarded them with precious stones, gold, horses, elephants, chariots, and fine cloth. Around 200 years later a dynasty known as the Satavahanas became powerful in western India. The most important ruler of the Satavahanas was Gautamiputra Shri Satakarni. He and other Satavahana rulers were known as lords of the dakshinapatha, literally the route leading to the south, which was also used as a name for the entire southern region. He sent his army to the eastern, western and southern coasts.

Test: History - 1 - Question 24

With reference to the Gupta period, consider the following statements:

1. In the Gupta period, Bhagavatism or Vaishnavism over shadowed Mahayana Buddhism.

2. Nalanda became a centre of Buddhist education.

3. In this period, land taxes decreased in number and those on trade and commerce increased.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 24

Buddhism no longer received royal patronage in the Gupta period, as Bhagavatism or Vaishnavism over shadowed Mahayana Buddhism by the Gupta times. However, some stupas and viharas (monasteries) were constructed and Nalanda became a centre of Buddhist education. It was founded by the Gupta emperor Kumargupta. During the Gupta period, land taxes increased in number and those on trade and commerce decreased.

Test: History - 1 - Question 25

Consider the following statements about Amir Khusrau:

1. He lived through the reigns of six Sultans of Delhi and was connected with their courts.

2. He created a new style of Persian, which came to be known as Sabaq-i-Hindi.

3. Masnavis are narrative poems, which have great literary and historical value, which have been written by Khusrau.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 25
  • Amir Khusrau (1253-1325) was the most famous and outstanding of the Persian scholars and poets of the Sultanate period. His real name was Abul Hasan. He was one of the few Indian writers of Persian poetry whose works have been read and admired beyond their own country. His works represent the beginning of a new trend in India based Persian literature – the trend of the growing familiarity with the Indian literature and influence of the Indian literature on the Persian writings in India.

  • He was the Indian born son of a Turkish immigrant. He began his career as a courtier and poet during the reign of Sultan Balban. He became a disciple of Shaikh Nizammudin Auliya, the famous Sufi saint of the Chisti order. He was the court poet during the reigns of Jalaluddin Khalji and Alauddin Khalji. Later, Sultan Ghiyasuddin Tughluq also patronized him. He lived through the reigns of 6 Sultans of Delhi and was connected with their courts. His poetry consisted of a great variety of forms – lyric, ode, epic and elegy. His poetry was essentially Indian in sentiment, though he followed the Persian models in technique. Thus, he created a new style of Persian, which came to be known as Sabaq-i-Hindi or the Indian style.

  • Five literary masterpieces composed by him are Mutla-ul Anwar, Shirin Khuswau, Laila Majnun, Ayina-i Sikandari and Hasht Bihist. He dedicated all of them to Alauddin Khalji. His Five Diwans (Collection of compositions called ghazals) include Tuhfat-us Sighar, Wast-ul Hayat, Ghurrat-ul Kamal, Baqiya Naqiya and Nihayat-ul Kamal.

  • These compositions show the great lyrical talent of his poetry. Khusrau also wrote historical Masnavis (narrative poems), which have great literary and historical value. He was not a historian in the actual sense of the term, but since he enjoyed the patronage of successive Sultans of Delhi and since he selected historical themes for his Masnavis, the historical content of his writings is of great interest to the students of the history of his times. In Qiran-us Sadain, Khusrau describes the quarrel and reconciliation between Sultan Kaiqubad and his father Bughra Khan.

  • Miftah-ul Futuh deals with the military successes of Sultan Jalaluddin Khalji. Ashiqa is the story of romantic love between Khizr Khan, the eldest son of Sultan Alauddin Khalji and Deval Rani, daughter of Rai Karan, the Raja of Gujarat. In Nuh Siphr (the Nine Skies) he gives a poetical description of Sultan Qutubuddin Mubarak Khalji’s reign. This work also contains references to contemporary social and religious conditions. In Tughluq Nama he describes Ghiyasuddin Tughluq’s rise to power.

  • In Khazain-ul Futuh, Khusrau gives an account of Alauddin Khalji’s conquests in the South. Amir Khusrau’s Persian poetry often reflected the love for his country. He composed verses in Hindavi (a form of Hindi or Urdu) also and showed the way for the future development of Urdu language.

Test: History - 1 - Question 26

Consider the following statements about the Medieval India:

  1. Many Saiva sects and centres of learning flourished in Kashmir during the period.

  2. Surgery declined because the dissection of dead bodies was regarded as fit only for the people of low castes.

  3. The Lilawati of Bhaskar-II which was written during this period remained a standard text for medicine.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 26
  • In Medieval India, Kashmir was an important centre of education. Many Saiva sects and centres of learning flourished in Kashmir during the period. A number of important maths was set up in south India, for example, at Madurai and Sringeri.

  • Various centres of education provided a great impetus to discussions, religion and philosophy being the main topics. The numerous Maths and other centres of education, in various parts of India enabled ideas to flow freely and quickly from one part of the country to another.

  • Philosophical education was not considered complete till the philosopher had visited various centres of learning in different parts of the country and held discussions with the scholars there.

  • The growth of science in the country slowed down during the period so that, in course of time, it was no longer regarded as a leading country in the field of science. Thus, surgery declined because the dissection of dead bodies was regarded as fit only for the people of low castes.

  • In fact, surgery became the profession of barbers. Astronomy was gradually pushed into the background by astrology. However, some advance was made in the field of mathematics.

  • The Lilawati of Bhaskar-II, which was written during this period, remained a standard text for a longtime. Some advance was made in the field of medicine by the use of minerals, especially mercury. Many books were written on plant sciences and for the treatment of animals (e.g., horses, elephants, etc.).

Test: History - 1 - Question 27

Consider the following statements:

1. Worship of Bodhisattvas

2. Hollowing out of cave monasteries

3. Development of a new form of Buddhism known as Mahayana Buddhism

4. Buddhist scholars begin to write in Sanskrit

Which of the above statements is/are reasons for the pread of Buddhism?

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 27
All statements are correct.

Enrich Your Learning:

  • The spread of Buddhism A Kushana ruler named Kanishka organised a Buddhist council where scholars met and discussed important matters. Ashvaghosha, a poet who lived in Kanishka’s court composed a biography of the Buddha, the Buddhacharit. Ashvaghosha and other Buddhist scholars began to write in Sanskrit. A new form of Buddhism, known as Mahayana Buddhism, developed. In Mahayana Buddhism statues of the Buddha were made in Mathura and Taxila and a belief in Bodhisattvas begin. The Boddhisattvas were supposed to be persons who had attained enlightenment. Once they attained enlightenment, they remained in the world to teach and help other people instead of maintaining isolation.

  • The worship of Bodhisattvas became very popular and spread throughout Central Asia, China, and later to Korea and Japan. Buddhism also spread to western and southern India. Caves were made for monks to live in and some for kings, queens and merchants. Roads connecting prosperous ports on the coast with cities in the Deccan ran through the passes of western Ghats and traders used to halt in these cave monasteries. Buddhism also spread south eastwards, to Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand, and other parts of Southeast Asia including Indonesia. The older form of Buddhism, known as Theravada Buddhism, was more popular in these areas.

Test: History - 1 - Question 28

With reference to ‘Palaeolithic Age’, consider the following statements:

1. The factory sites were the places where hunter and gatherers made wood and bone tools.

2. The Palaeolithic sites have evidence of tools made of limestone.

3. Hunsgi and Kurnool caves are some of the examples of Palaeolithic sites.

Choose the correct answer using the codes given below:

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 28
The factory sites were the stone places where hunter and gatherers made stone tools.

Enrich Your Learning:

Palaeolithic sites -

  • The Palaeolithic period extends from 2 million years ago to about 12,000 years ago. The Palaeolithic comes from two Greek words, ‘paleo’, meaning old, and ‘lithos’, meaning stone. This long period is divided into the Lower, Middle and Upper Palaeolithic. This long period covers 99% of human history. The hunter- gatherers hunted wild animals, caught fish and birds, gathered fruits, roots, nuts, seeds, leaves, stalks and eggs. Hunter-gatherers likely made and used tools of stone, wood and bone. Stone tools were used to cut meats, chop fruits and roots and some were attached to make spears and arrows for hunting.

  • Places where the stone was found and where people made tools are known as factory sites. Most tools were made from limestone, which was locally available. Wood was also used to make huts and tools. Hunsgi and Kurnool caves are some of the places where the evidences of Palaeolithic age have been found.

Test: History - 1 - Question 29

Which of the following statements are correct?

1. Soma was an intoxicating drink made in the Vedic period.

2. It (Soma) was a ritualistic drink.

Select the correct answer using the code given below:

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 29

Soma was a ritualistic drink. It was an intoxicating drink made since the Vedic Mandala of the Rigvedic period. There are two ways to get wine: fermentation and distillation. Fermentation was widely known in the world. Wine was procured by fermenting rice, sugarcane juice, mahuwa flowers, etc. Distillation, however, was a late comer. Some think that it was first discovered in Italy in the 12th century A.D.

Test: History - 1 - Question 30

Consider the following statements about Muryan empire:

1. The Arthashastra was written in this period.

2. Some officials were appointed to collect taxes from the people.

3. The spies were appointed to keep a watch on officials.

4. Chandragupta Maurya embraced Buddhism after renouncing his throne.

Choose the correct answer choosing the codes given below:

Detailed Solution for Test: History - 1 - Question 30
Chandragupta Maurya embraced Jainism after retiring, when he renounced his throne and material possessions to join a wandering group of Jain monks.

Enrich Your Learning:

Mauryan empire:

  • The Mauryan empire was founded by Chandragupta Maurya, more than 2300 years ago. Chandragupta was supported by a wise man named Chanakya or Kautilya. Many of Chanakya’s ideas were written down in a book called the Arthashastra. There were several cities in the empire such as Taxila, Pataliputra, Ujjain. Taxila was a gateway to the northwest, including Central Asia, while Ujjain lay on the route from north to south India. People in different parts of the empire spoke different People in different parts of the empire spoke different languages. They probably ate different kinds of food and wore different kinds of clothes as well.

  • The area around Pataliputra was under the direct control of the emperor. The officials were appointed to collect taxes from farmers, herders, craftspersons and traders, who lived in villages and towns in the area. These officials (not all) were given salaries. Messengers went to and fro and spies kept a watch on the officials and they both were supervised by the emperor. There were also the forested regions and people living in these areas were more or less independent, but may have been expected to provide elephants, timber, honey and wax to Mauryan officials.

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