Page 1
ANSWERS TO THE GS QUESTION PAPER -1
1
HISTORY
1. With reference to Mughal India, what is/are
the difference/differences between Jagirdar
and Zamindar?
1. Jagirdars were holders of land
assignments in lieu of judicial and police
duties, whereas Zamindars were
holders of revenue rights without
obligation to perform any duty other than
revenue collection.
2. Land assignments to Jagirdars were
hereditary and revenue rights of
Zamindars were not hereditary.
Select the correct answer using the code
given below:
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2
Answer: D
During Akbar's period all the territory was
broadly divided into two: khalisa and jagir. The
revenue from the first went to Imperial treasury
and that from jagir was assigned to jagirdars in
lieu of their salary in cash (naqd) according to
their rank. Right to collect revenue was to utilise
the same for their salary and to meet their
military obligations. The judicial and police
functions were performed locally by zamindars.
An important feature of the jagir system was
shifting of jagir-holders from one jagir to another
for administrative reasons. This system of
transfers checked the jagirdars from developing
local roots. Thus jagirs were transferable and
could be seized too. Zamindars on the other
hand were hereditary. The zamindars were
present in practically every part of the Mughal
Empire and held the most significant position in
the agrarian structure of Mughal India. The
word zamindar is derived from two Persian
words-zamin (land) and dar (holder).
Source: Medieval India, Class 11 NCERT, by
Satish Chandra
2. With reference to land reforms in
independent India, which one of the
following statements is correct?
(a) The ceiling laws were aimed at family
holdings and not individual holdings.
(b) The major aim of land reforms was
providing agricultural land to all the
landless.
(c) It resulted in cultivation of cash crops as
a predominant form of cultivation.
(d) Land reforms permitted no exemptions
to the ceiling limits.
Answer: B
Major weakness of Land ceiling laws was that
they were aimed at individual holdings. It
allowed many zamindars to transfer land
notionally to their relatives and thus escape the
ceiling. The reason for land reforms was
providing land to all landless people
(redistribution) because landlessness was
considered as one major reason of poverty and
exploitation. Cultivation of cash crops require
much more inputs than mere availability of
holdings. Cash crops, during British time, were
induced by force while in post-independence,
major transformation for cash crops has
happened where capital, market access,
technology and irrigation are available. After the
Second Plan, a large numbers of exemptions
kicked in for certain categories of land –
tea/rubber plantations, orchards, dairying etc to
promote certain kind of capitalist expansion in
place of absentee landlordism.
Source – India since Independence, Chapter
28 and 29, Bipin Chandra
3. Consider the following statements about
'the Charter Act of 1813':
1. It ended the trade monopoly of the East
India Company in India except for trade
in tea and trade with China.
2. It asserted the sovereignty of the British
Crown over the Indian territories held by
the Company.
3. The revenues of India were now
controlled by the British Parliament.
Which of the statements given above are
correct?
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 2 and 3 only
(c) 1 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: A
The 1813 Act ended the Company‘s monopoly
over trade in India but the company retained
Page 2
ANSWERS TO THE GS QUESTION PAPER -1
1
HISTORY
1. With reference to Mughal India, what is/are
the difference/differences between Jagirdar
and Zamindar?
1. Jagirdars were holders of land
assignments in lieu of judicial and police
duties, whereas Zamindars were
holders of revenue rights without
obligation to perform any duty other than
revenue collection.
2. Land assignments to Jagirdars were
hereditary and revenue rights of
Zamindars were not hereditary.
Select the correct answer using the code
given below:
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2
Answer: D
During Akbar's period all the territory was
broadly divided into two: khalisa and jagir. The
revenue from the first went to Imperial treasury
and that from jagir was assigned to jagirdars in
lieu of their salary in cash (naqd) according to
their rank. Right to collect revenue was to utilise
the same for their salary and to meet their
military obligations. The judicial and police
functions were performed locally by zamindars.
An important feature of the jagir system was
shifting of jagir-holders from one jagir to another
for administrative reasons. This system of
transfers checked the jagirdars from developing
local roots. Thus jagirs were transferable and
could be seized too. Zamindars on the other
hand were hereditary. The zamindars were
present in practically every part of the Mughal
Empire and held the most significant position in
the agrarian structure of Mughal India. The
word zamindar is derived from two Persian
words-zamin (land) and dar (holder).
Source: Medieval India, Class 11 NCERT, by
Satish Chandra
2. With reference to land reforms in
independent India, which one of the
following statements is correct?
(a) The ceiling laws were aimed at family
holdings and not individual holdings.
(b) The major aim of land reforms was
providing agricultural land to all the
landless.
(c) It resulted in cultivation of cash crops as
a predominant form of cultivation.
(d) Land reforms permitted no exemptions
to the ceiling limits.
Answer: B
Major weakness of Land ceiling laws was that
they were aimed at individual holdings. It
allowed many zamindars to transfer land
notionally to their relatives and thus escape the
ceiling. The reason for land reforms was
providing land to all landless people
(redistribution) because landlessness was
considered as one major reason of poverty and
exploitation. Cultivation of cash crops require
much more inputs than mere availability of
holdings. Cash crops, during British time, were
induced by force while in post-independence,
major transformation for cash crops has
happened where capital, market access,
technology and irrigation are available. After the
Second Plan, a large numbers of exemptions
kicked in for certain categories of land –
tea/rubber plantations, orchards, dairying etc to
promote certain kind of capitalist expansion in
place of absentee landlordism.
Source – India since Independence, Chapter
28 and 29, Bipin Chandra
3. Consider the following statements about
'the Charter Act of 1813':
1. It ended the trade monopoly of the East
India Company in India except for trade
in tea and trade with China.
2. It asserted the sovereignty of the British
Crown over the Indian territories held by
the Company.
3. The revenues of India were now
controlled by the British Parliament.
Which of the statements given above are
correct?
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 2 and 3 only
(c) 1 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: A
The 1813 Act ended the Company‘s monopoly
over trade in India but the company retained
2
trade with China and the trade in tea. So,
statement 1 is correct. (Spectrum 2017, 566).
The Act asserted the ?undoubted sovereignty of
the Crown of the United Kingdom? over Indian
territories. So, statement 2 is correct (Plassey
to Partition 2012, 79).
The revenues of India were controlled by the
British parliament through Pitts India Act 1784.
Source – Plassey to Partition by Sekhar
Bandyopadhyay and Spectrum History
4. With reference to Swadeshi Movement,
consider the following statements:
1. It contributed to the revival of the
indigenous artisan crafts and industries.
2. The National Council of Education was
established as a part of Swadeshi
Movement.
Which of the statements given above is/are
correct?
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both l and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2
Answer: C
The Swadeshi spirit found expression in the
establishment of swadeshi textile mills, soap
and match factories, tanneries, banks etc. so it
contributed to the revival of the indigenous
artisan crafts and industries. So, statement 1 is
correct.
On August 15, 1906, the National Council of
Education was set-up to organise a system of
education.
Source – Spectrum History 2017, 296-297
5. Consider the following pairs:
Movement/
Organization
Leader
1. All India Anti-
Untouchability
League
: Mahatma Gandhi
2. All India Kisan
Sabha
: Swami
Sahajanand
Saraswati
3. Self-Respect
Movement
: E. V.
Ramaswami
Naicker
Which of the pairs given above is/are
correctly matched?
(a) 1 only
(b) 1 and 2 only
(c) 2 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: D
Gandhi set up All India Anti-Untouchability
League in September 1932. (Spectrum Page
438).
The All India Kisan Sabha was founded in
Lucknow in April 1936 With Swami Sahjananda
Saraswati as the president. (Spectrum Page
652).
Self-Respect Movement emerged in South
India under the leadership of E Ramaswamy
Naicker, ?Periyar? (Plassey to Partition 349).
Source – Spectrum and Plassey to Partition
6. Which one of the following is not a
Harappan site?
(a) Chanhudaro
(b) Kot Diji
(c) Sohgaura
(d) Desalpur
Answer: C
Chanhudaro and Desalpur are Harappan sites.
Kot Diji is contemporaneous to Harappan era.
Sohgura, on the other hand, is famous for
Ashokan era inscription.
Source: Ancient India NCERT, RS Sharma
(Chapters – Harappan Civilisation, The Age
of Mauryan)
7. ln which of the following relief sculpture
inscriptions is 'Ranyo Ashoka' (King
Ashoka) mentioned along with the stone
portrait of Ashoka?
(a) Kanganahalli
(b) Sanchi
(c) Shahbazgarhi
(d) Sohgaura
Answer: A
Kanaganahalli is about 3 km from Sannati,
Karnataka. An important excavation site
for Buddhist monuments. The most important
finding of the excavation include a stone
sculptured slab bearing the name Ranyo
Ashoko. The first inscribed portrait
of Ashoka (surrounded by female attendants
and queens) found at Kanaganahalli
Source: A History of Ancient and Early
Medieval India, Upinder Singh
Page 3
ANSWERS TO THE GS QUESTION PAPER -1
1
HISTORY
1. With reference to Mughal India, what is/are
the difference/differences between Jagirdar
and Zamindar?
1. Jagirdars were holders of land
assignments in lieu of judicial and police
duties, whereas Zamindars were
holders of revenue rights without
obligation to perform any duty other than
revenue collection.
2. Land assignments to Jagirdars were
hereditary and revenue rights of
Zamindars were not hereditary.
Select the correct answer using the code
given below:
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2
Answer: D
During Akbar's period all the territory was
broadly divided into two: khalisa and jagir. The
revenue from the first went to Imperial treasury
and that from jagir was assigned to jagirdars in
lieu of their salary in cash (naqd) according to
their rank. Right to collect revenue was to utilise
the same for their salary and to meet their
military obligations. The judicial and police
functions were performed locally by zamindars.
An important feature of the jagir system was
shifting of jagir-holders from one jagir to another
for administrative reasons. This system of
transfers checked the jagirdars from developing
local roots. Thus jagirs were transferable and
could be seized too. Zamindars on the other
hand were hereditary. The zamindars were
present in practically every part of the Mughal
Empire and held the most significant position in
the agrarian structure of Mughal India. The
word zamindar is derived from two Persian
words-zamin (land) and dar (holder).
Source: Medieval India, Class 11 NCERT, by
Satish Chandra
2. With reference to land reforms in
independent India, which one of the
following statements is correct?
(a) The ceiling laws were aimed at family
holdings and not individual holdings.
(b) The major aim of land reforms was
providing agricultural land to all the
landless.
(c) It resulted in cultivation of cash crops as
a predominant form of cultivation.
(d) Land reforms permitted no exemptions
to the ceiling limits.
Answer: B
Major weakness of Land ceiling laws was that
they were aimed at individual holdings. It
allowed many zamindars to transfer land
notionally to their relatives and thus escape the
ceiling. The reason for land reforms was
providing land to all landless people
(redistribution) because landlessness was
considered as one major reason of poverty and
exploitation. Cultivation of cash crops require
much more inputs than mere availability of
holdings. Cash crops, during British time, were
induced by force while in post-independence,
major transformation for cash crops has
happened where capital, market access,
technology and irrigation are available. After the
Second Plan, a large numbers of exemptions
kicked in for certain categories of land –
tea/rubber plantations, orchards, dairying etc to
promote certain kind of capitalist expansion in
place of absentee landlordism.
Source – India since Independence, Chapter
28 and 29, Bipin Chandra
3. Consider the following statements about
'the Charter Act of 1813':
1. It ended the trade monopoly of the East
India Company in India except for trade
in tea and trade with China.
2. It asserted the sovereignty of the British
Crown over the Indian territories held by
the Company.
3. The revenues of India were now
controlled by the British Parliament.
Which of the statements given above are
correct?
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 2 and 3 only
(c) 1 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: A
The 1813 Act ended the Company‘s monopoly
over trade in India but the company retained
2
trade with China and the trade in tea. So,
statement 1 is correct. (Spectrum 2017, 566).
The Act asserted the ?undoubted sovereignty of
the Crown of the United Kingdom? over Indian
territories. So, statement 2 is correct (Plassey
to Partition 2012, 79).
The revenues of India were controlled by the
British parliament through Pitts India Act 1784.
Source – Plassey to Partition by Sekhar
Bandyopadhyay and Spectrum History
4. With reference to Swadeshi Movement,
consider the following statements:
1. It contributed to the revival of the
indigenous artisan crafts and industries.
2. The National Council of Education was
established as a part of Swadeshi
Movement.
Which of the statements given above is/are
correct?
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both l and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2
Answer: C
The Swadeshi spirit found expression in the
establishment of swadeshi textile mills, soap
and match factories, tanneries, banks etc. so it
contributed to the revival of the indigenous
artisan crafts and industries. So, statement 1 is
correct.
On August 15, 1906, the National Council of
Education was set-up to organise a system of
education.
Source – Spectrum History 2017, 296-297
5. Consider the following pairs:
Movement/
Organization
Leader
1. All India Anti-
Untouchability
League
: Mahatma Gandhi
2. All India Kisan
Sabha
: Swami
Sahajanand
Saraswati
3. Self-Respect
Movement
: E. V.
Ramaswami
Naicker
Which of the pairs given above is/are
correctly matched?
(a) 1 only
(b) 1 and 2 only
(c) 2 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: D
Gandhi set up All India Anti-Untouchability
League in September 1932. (Spectrum Page
438).
The All India Kisan Sabha was founded in
Lucknow in April 1936 With Swami Sahjananda
Saraswati as the president. (Spectrum Page
652).
Self-Respect Movement emerged in South
India under the leadership of E Ramaswamy
Naicker, ?Periyar? (Plassey to Partition 349).
Source – Spectrum and Plassey to Partition
6. Which one of the following is not a
Harappan site?
(a) Chanhudaro
(b) Kot Diji
(c) Sohgaura
(d) Desalpur
Answer: C
Chanhudaro and Desalpur are Harappan sites.
Kot Diji is contemporaneous to Harappan era.
Sohgura, on the other hand, is famous for
Ashokan era inscription.
Source: Ancient India NCERT, RS Sharma
(Chapters – Harappan Civilisation, The Age
of Mauryan)
7. ln which of the following relief sculpture
inscriptions is 'Ranyo Ashoka' (King
Ashoka) mentioned along with the stone
portrait of Ashoka?
(a) Kanganahalli
(b) Sanchi
(c) Shahbazgarhi
(d) Sohgaura
Answer: A
Kanaganahalli is about 3 km from Sannati,
Karnataka. An important excavation site
for Buddhist monuments. The most important
finding of the excavation include a stone
sculptured slab bearing the name Ranyo
Ashoko. The first inscribed portrait
of Ashoka (surrounded by female attendants
and queens) found at Kanaganahalli
Source: A History of Ancient and Early
Medieval India, Upinder Singh
3
8. Consider the following:
1. Deification of the Buddha
2. Treading the path of Bodhisattvas
3. Image worship and rituals
Which of the above is/are the feature/
features of Mahayana Buddhism?
(a) 1 only
(b) 1 and 2 only
(c) 2 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: D
Mahayana Buddhism is one of two main
existing branches of Buddhism (the other
being Theravada). It started considering
Buddha as a god rather than a great teacher
and began worshipping Buddha‘s images. It
also has a whole cosmology of gods and
goddesses as well as various Bodhisattvas
seeking complete enlightenment for the benefit
of all sentient beings. In fact, the teachings of
Mahayana are also nothing but treating the path
of various Bodhisattvas.
Source – A History of Ancient and Early
Medieval India, Upinder Singh. Chapter 8 –
Interactions and Innovations (200BCE-
200CE)
9. With reference to forced labour (Vishti) in
India during the Gupta period, which one of
the following statements is correct?
(a) It was considered a source of income for
the State, a sort of tax paid by the
people.
(b) It was totally absent in the Madhya
Pradesh and Kathiawar regions of the
Gupta Empire.
(c)The forced labourer was entitled to
weekly wages.
(d) The eldest son of the labourer was sent
as the forced labourer.
Answer: A
Vishti was form of forced labour extracted by
either state, provincial governor or local chief. It
is also mentioned on Gupta era copper
inscriptions that enlist variety of taxes.
Junagarh inscription mentions vishti as one
form of tax, which indicates that it was extracted
from Gujarat and Malwa region. Since it was a
forced labour in lieu of tax, it was not a wage
labour. Wage labour existed in ancient India but
it was not called vishti. Vishti could be extracted
from anyone, not in particular from eldest son
only.
Source: A History of Ancient and Medieval
India, Upinder Singh.
10. Building 'Kalyaana Mandapas' was a
notable feature in the temple construction in
the kingdom of
(a) Chalukya
(b) Chandela
(c) Rashtrakuta
(d) Vijayanagara
Answer: D
Kalyana Mandapas meant to celebrate divine
weddings was a notable feature of the
Vijaynagara Kingdom.
Source – Themes in Indian History II, Page
186
11. Consider the following statements:
1. In the revenue administration of Delhi
Sultanate, the in-charge of revenue
collection was known as'Amil'.
2. The Iqta system of Sultans of Delhi was
an ancient indigenous institution.
3. The office of 'Mir Bakshi' came into
existence during the reign of Khalji
Sultans of Delhi.
Which of the statements given above is/are
correct?
(a) 1 only
(b) 1 and 2 only
(c) 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: A
Amils were officers deputed to collect revenue
during the sultanate era in North India. Mir
Bakshi, on the other hand, was a Mughal high
office in charge of military pay and accounts.
Iqta system of land control was introduced in
India by the Delhi sultans. It was originally of
Central Asian and West Asian origin.
Source: Medieval India, NCERT Satish
Chandra
12. Consider the following statements:
1. Saint Nimbarka was a contemporary of
Akbar.
2. Saint Kabir was greatly influenced by
Shaikh Ahmad Sirhindi.
Page 4
ANSWERS TO THE GS QUESTION PAPER -1
1
HISTORY
1. With reference to Mughal India, what is/are
the difference/differences between Jagirdar
and Zamindar?
1. Jagirdars were holders of land
assignments in lieu of judicial and police
duties, whereas Zamindars were
holders of revenue rights without
obligation to perform any duty other than
revenue collection.
2. Land assignments to Jagirdars were
hereditary and revenue rights of
Zamindars were not hereditary.
Select the correct answer using the code
given below:
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2
Answer: D
During Akbar's period all the territory was
broadly divided into two: khalisa and jagir. The
revenue from the first went to Imperial treasury
and that from jagir was assigned to jagirdars in
lieu of their salary in cash (naqd) according to
their rank. Right to collect revenue was to utilise
the same for their salary and to meet their
military obligations. The judicial and police
functions were performed locally by zamindars.
An important feature of the jagir system was
shifting of jagir-holders from one jagir to another
for administrative reasons. This system of
transfers checked the jagirdars from developing
local roots. Thus jagirs were transferable and
could be seized too. Zamindars on the other
hand were hereditary. The zamindars were
present in practically every part of the Mughal
Empire and held the most significant position in
the agrarian structure of Mughal India. The
word zamindar is derived from two Persian
words-zamin (land) and dar (holder).
Source: Medieval India, Class 11 NCERT, by
Satish Chandra
2. With reference to land reforms in
independent India, which one of the
following statements is correct?
(a) The ceiling laws were aimed at family
holdings and not individual holdings.
(b) The major aim of land reforms was
providing agricultural land to all the
landless.
(c) It resulted in cultivation of cash crops as
a predominant form of cultivation.
(d) Land reforms permitted no exemptions
to the ceiling limits.
Answer: B
Major weakness of Land ceiling laws was that
they were aimed at individual holdings. It
allowed many zamindars to transfer land
notionally to their relatives and thus escape the
ceiling. The reason for land reforms was
providing land to all landless people
(redistribution) because landlessness was
considered as one major reason of poverty and
exploitation. Cultivation of cash crops require
much more inputs than mere availability of
holdings. Cash crops, during British time, were
induced by force while in post-independence,
major transformation for cash crops has
happened where capital, market access,
technology and irrigation are available. After the
Second Plan, a large numbers of exemptions
kicked in for certain categories of land –
tea/rubber plantations, orchards, dairying etc to
promote certain kind of capitalist expansion in
place of absentee landlordism.
Source – India since Independence, Chapter
28 and 29, Bipin Chandra
3. Consider the following statements about
'the Charter Act of 1813':
1. It ended the trade monopoly of the East
India Company in India except for trade
in tea and trade with China.
2. It asserted the sovereignty of the British
Crown over the Indian territories held by
the Company.
3. The revenues of India were now
controlled by the British Parliament.
Which of the statements given above are
correct?
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 2 and 3 only
(c) 1 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: A
The 1813 Act ended the Company‘s monopoly
over trade in India but the company retained
2
trade with China and the trade in tea. So,
statement 1 is correct. (Spectrum 2017, 566).
The Act asserted the ?undoubted sovereignty of
the Crown of the United Kingdom? over Indian
territories. So, statement 2 is correct (Plassey
to Partition 2012, 79).
The revenues of India were controlled by the
British parliament through Pitts India Act 1784.
Source – Plassey to Partition by Sekhar
Bandyopadhyay and Spectrum History
4. With reference to Swadeshi Movement,
consider the following statements:
1. It contributed to the revival of the
indigenous artisan crafts and industries.
2. The National Council of Education was
established as a part of Swadeshi
Movement.
Which of the statements given above is/are
correct?
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both l and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2
Answer: C
The Swadeshi spirit found expression in the
establishment of swadeshi textile mills, soap
and match factories, tanneries, banks etc. so it
contributed to the revival of the indigenous
artisan crafts and industries. So, statement 1 is
correct.
On August 15, 1906, the National Council of
Education was set-up to organise a system of
education.
Source – Spectrum History 2017, 296-297
5. Consider the following pairs:
Movement/
Organization
Leader
1. All India Anti-
Untouchability
League
: Mahatma Gandhi
2. All India Kisan
Sabha
: Swami
Sahajanand
Saraswati
3. Self-Respect
Movement
: E. V.
Ramaswami
Naicker
Which of the pairs given above is/are
correctly matched?
(a) 1 only
(b) 1 and 2 only
(c) 2 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: D
Gandhi set up All India Anti-Untouchability
League in September 1932. (Spectrum Page
438).
The All India Kisan Sabha was founded in
Lucknow in April 1936 With Swami Sahjananda
Saraswati as the president. (Spectrum Page
652).
Self-Respect Movement emerged in South
India under the leadership of E Ramaswamy
Naicker, ?Periyar? (Plassey to Partition 349).
Source – Spectrum and Plassey to Partition
6. Which one of the following is not a
Harappan site?
(a) Chanhudaro
(b) Kot Diji
(c) Sohgaura
(d) Desalpur
Answer: C
Chanhudaro and Desalpur are Harappan sites.
Kot Diji is contemporaneous to Harappan era.
Sohgura, on the other hand, is famous for
Ashokan era inscription.
Source: Ancient India NCERT, RS Sharma
(Chapters – Harappan Civilisation, The Age
of Mauryan)
7. ln which of the following relief sculpture
inscriptions is 'Ranyo Ashoka' (King
Ashoka) mentioned along with the stone
portrait of Ashoka?
(a) Kanganahalli
(b) Sanchi
(c) Shahbazgarhi
(d) Sohgaura
Answer: A
Kanaganahalli is about 3 km from Sannati,
Karnataka. An important excavation site
for Buddhist monuments. The most important
finding of the excavation include a stone
sculptured slab bearing the name Ranyo
Ashoko. The first inscribed portrait
of Ashoka (surrounded by female attendants
and queens) found at Kanaganahalli
Source: A History of Ancient and Early
Medieval India, Upinder Singh
3
8. Consider the following:
1. Deification of the Buddha
2. Treading the path of Bodhisattvas
3. Image worship and rituals
Which of the above is/are the feature/
features of Mahayana Buddhism?
(a) 1 only
(b) 1 and 2 only
(c) 2 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: D
Mahayana Buddhism is one of two main
existing branches of Buddhism (the other
being Theravada). It started considering
Buddha as a god rather than a great teacher
and began worshipping Buddha‘s images. It
also has a whole cosmology of gods and
goddesses as well as various Bodhisattvas
seeking complete enlightenment for the benefit
of all sentient beings. In fact, the teachings of
Mahayana are also nothing but treating the path
of various Bodhisattvas.
Source – A History of Ancient and Early
Medieval India, Upinder Singh. Chapter 8 –
Interactions and Innovations (200BCE-
200CE)
9. With reference to forced labour (Vishti) in
India during the Gupta period, which one of
the following statements is correct?
(a) It was considered a source of income for
the State, a sort of tax paid by the
people.
(b) It was totally absent in the Madhya
Pradesh and Kathiawar regions of the
Gupta Empire.
(c)The forced labourer was entitled to
weekly wages.
(d) The eldest son of the labourer was sent
as the forced labourer.
Answer: A
Vishti was form of forced labour extracted by
either state, provincial governor or local chief. It
is also mentioned on Gupta era copper
inscriptions that enlist variety of taxes.
Junagarh inscription mentions vishti as one
form of tax, which indicates that it was extracted
from Gujarat and Malwa region. Since it was a
forced labour in lieu of tax, it was not a wage
labour. Wage labour existed in ancient India but
it was not called vishti. Vishti could be extracted
from anyone, not in particular from eldest son
only.
Source: A History of Ancient and Medieval
India, Upinder Singh.
10. Building 'Kalyaana Mandapas' was a
notable feature in the temple construction in
the kingdom of
(a) Chalukya
(b) Chandela
(c) Rashtrakuta
(d) Vijayanagara
Answer: D
Kalyana Mandapas meant to celebrate divine
weddings was a notable feature of the
Vijaynagara Kingdom.
Source – Themes in Indian History II, Page
186
11. Consider the following statements:
1. In the revenue administration of Delhi
Sultanate, the in-charge of revenue
collection was known as'Amil'.
2. The Iqta system of Sultans of Delhi was
an ancient indigenous institution.
3. The office of 'Mir Bakshi' came into
existence during the reign of Khalji
Sultans of Delhi.
Which of the statements given above is/are
correct?
(a) 1 only
(b) 1 and 2 only
(c) 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: A
Amils were officers deputed to collect revenue
during the sultanate era in North India. Mir
Bakshi, on the other hand, was a Mughal high
office in charge of military pay and accounts.
Iqta system of land control was introduced in
India by the Delhi sultans. It was originally of
Central Asian and West Asian origin.
Source: Medieval India, NCERT Satish
Chandra
12. Consider the following statements:
1. Saint Nimbarka was a contemporary of
Akbar.
2. Saint Kabir was greatly influenced by
Shaikh Ahmad Sirhindi.
4
Which of the statements given above is/ are
correct?
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2
Answer: D
Both the statements are incorrect. Nimbarka
era is not exactly known but its sometime in
12
th
-13
th
century. Kabir belonged to the earlier
era than Sirhindi. Also, Sirhindi was Islamic,
Hanafi, scholar of Naqshbandi silsilah while
Kabir was the follower of Nirgun bhakti.
Source: Medieval India NCERT by Satish
Chandra
13. Which one of the following groups of plants
was domesticated in the 'New World' and
introduced into the 'Old World?
(a) Tobacco, cocoa and rubber
(b) Tobacco, cotton and rubber
(c) Cotton, coffee and sugarcane
(d) Rubber, coffee and wheat
Answer: A
Cotton was cultivate in India since ancient era.
Even Harappan era evidence of cotton
cultivation is found. So is wheat. Wheat has
been a widely cultivated crop in India since time
immemorial. However tobacco, cocoa and
rubber came to India through Europeans in the
late medieval or early modern era. All of them
originated in South America. This process is
termed as Columbian exchange (named for
Christopher Columbus). It was the widespread
transfer of plants, animals, culture, human
populations, technology, diseases, and ideas
between the Americas, West Africa, and the
Old World in the 15th and 16th centuries.
14. With reference to the British colonial rule in
India, consider the following statements:
1. Mahatma Gandhi was instrumental in
the abolition of the system of 'indentured
labour'.
2. In Lord Chelmsford's 'War Conference',
Mahatma Gandhi did not support the
resolution on recruiting Indians for World
War.
3. Consequent upon the breaking of salt
law by Indian people, the Indian
National Congress was declared illegal
by the colonial rulers.
Which of the statements given above are
correct?
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 1 and 3 only
(c) 2 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: B
Statement 1 and 3 are correct. Indentured
labour system soon died after Gandhi left South
Africa. Also, Gandhi‘s colleague C.f. Andrews
contributed in the abolition campaign.
Statement 2 is incorrect. Gandhi did support the
resolution on recruiting Indians for World War.
Source: Spectrum Modern India
15. With reference to Indian National
Movement, consider the following pairs:
Person Position held
Tej
Bahadur
Sapru
President, All India
Liberal Federation
K. C. Neogy Member, The
Constituent Assembly
P. C. Joshi General Secretary,
Communist Party of
India
Which of the pairs given above is/are
correctly matched?
(a) 1 only
(b) 1 and 2 only
(c) 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: D
Tej Bahadur Sapru was a
prominent Indian freedom fighter, lawyer and
politician. He was a key figure in India's struggle
for independence, helping draft the Indian
Constitution. He was the leader of the Liberal
party in British-ruled India. When the Montagu
report of 1918 was made public, there was a
divide in the Congress over it. The moderates
welcomed it while the extremists opposed it.
This led to a schism in the Congress with
moderate leaders forming the "Indian National
Liberal Federation" in 1919. The party (INLF)
was founded by Surendra Nath Banarjea and
some of its prominent leaders were Tej
Bahadur Sapru, V. S. Srinivasa Sastri and M.
Page 5
ANSWERS TO THE GS QUESTION PAPER -1
1
HISTORY
1. With reference to Mughal India, what is/are
the difference/differences between Jagirdar
and Zamindar?
1. Jagirdars were holders of land
assignments in lieu of judicial and police
duties, whereas Zamindars were
holders of revenue rights without
obligation to perform any duty other than
revenue collection.
2. Land assignments to Jagirdars were
hereditary and revenue rights of
Zamindars were not hereditary.
Select the correct answer using the code
given below:
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2
Answer: D
During Akbar's period all the territory was
broadly divided into two: khalisa and jagir. The
revenue from the first went to Imperial treasury
and that from jagir was assigned to jagirdars in
lieu of their salary in cash (naqd) according to
their rank. Right to collect revenue was to utilise
the same for their salary and to meet their
military obligations. The judicial and police
functions were performed locally by zamindars.
An important feature of the jagir system was
shifting of jagir-holders from one jagir to another
for administrative reasons. This system of
transfers checked the jagirdars from developing
local roots. Thus jagirs were transferable and
could be seized too. Zamindars on the other
hand were hereditary. The zamindars were
present in practically every part of the Mughal
Empire and held the most significant position in
the agrarian structure of Mughal India. The
word zamindar is derived from two Persian
words-zamin (land) and dar (holder).
Source: Medieval India, Class 11 NCERT, by
Satish Chandra
2. With reference to land reforms in
independent India, which one of the
following statements is correct?
(a) The ceiling laws were aimed at family
holdings and not individual holdings.
(b) The major aim of land reforms was
providing agricultural land to all the
landless.
(c) It resulted in cultivation of cash crops as
a predominant form of cultivation.
(d) Land reforms permitted no exemptions
to the ceiling limits.
Answer: B
Major weakness of Land ceiling laws was that
they were aimed at individual holdings. It
allowed many zamindars to transfer land
notionally to their relatives and thus escape the
ceiling. The reason for land reforms was
providing land to all landless people
(redistribution) because landlessness was
considered as one major reason of poverty and
exploitation. Cultivation of cash crops require
much more inputs than mere availability of
holdings. Cash crops, during British time, were
induced by force while in post-independence,
major transformation for cash crops has
happened where capital, market access,
technology and irrigation are available. After the
Second Plan, a large numbers of exemptions
kicked in for certain categories of land –
tea/rubber plantations, orchards, dairying etc to
promote certain kind of capitalist expansion in
place of absentee landlordism.
Source – India since Independence, Chapter
28 and 29, Bipin Chandra
3. Consider the following statements about
'the Charter Act of 1813':
1. It ended the trade monopoly of the East
India Company in India except for trade
in tea and trade with China.
2. It asserted the sovereignty of the British
Crown over the Indian territories held by
the Company.
3. The revenues of India were now
controlled by the British Parliament.
Which of the statements given above are
correct?
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 2 and 3 only
(c) 1 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: A
The 1813 Act ended the Company‘s monopoly
over trade in India but the company retained
2
trade with China and the trade in tea. So,
statement 1 is correct. (Spectrum 2017, 566).
The Act asserted the ?undoubted sovereignty of
the Crown of the United Kingdom? over Indian
territories. So, statement 2 is correct (Plassey
to Partition 2012, 79).
The revenues of India were controlled by the
British parliament through Pitts India Act 1784.
Source – Plassey to Partition by Sekhar
Bandyopadhyay and Spectrum History
4. With reference to Swadeshi Movement,
consider the following statements:
1. It contributed to the revival of the
indigenous artisan crafts and industries.
2. The National Council of Education was
established as a part of Swadeshi
Movement.
Which of the statements given above is/are
correct?
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both l and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2
Answer: C
The Swadeshi spirit found expression in the
establishment of swadeshi textile mills, soap
and match factories, tanneries, banks etc. so it
contributed to the revival of the indigenous
artisan crafts and industries. So, statement 1 is
correct.
On August 15, 1906, the National Council of
Education was set-up to organise a system of
education.
Source – Spectrum History 2017, 296-297
5. Consider the following pairs:
Movement/
Organization
Leader
1. All India Anti-
Untouchability
League
: Mahatma Gandhi
2. All India Kisan
Sabha
: Swami
Sahajanand
Saraswati
3. Self-Respect
Movement
: E. V.
Ramaswami
Naicker
Which of the pairs given above is/are
correctly matched?
(a) 1 only
(b) 1 and 2 only
(c) 2 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: D
Gandhi set up All India Anti-Untouchability
League in September 1932. (Spectrum Page
438).
The All India Kisan Sabha was founded in
Lucknow in April 1936 With Swami Sahjananda
Saraswati as the president. (Spectrum Page
652).
Self-Respect Movement emerged in South
India under the leadership of E Ramaswamy
Naicker, ?Periyar? (Plassey to Partition 349).
Source – Spectrum and Plassey to Partition
6. Which one of the following is not a
Harappan site?
(a) Chanhudaro
(b) Kot Diji
(c) Sohgaura
(d) Desalpur
Answer: C
Chanhudaro and Desalpur are Harappan sites.
Kot Diji is contemporaneous to Harappan era.
Sohgura, on the other hand, is famous for
Ashokan era inscription.
Source: Ancient India NCERT, RS Sharma
(Chapters – Harappan Civilisation, The Age
of Mauryan)
7. ln which of the following relief sculpture
inscriptions is 'Ranyo Ashoka' (King
Ashoka) mentioned along with the stone
portrait of Ashoka?
(a) Kanganahalli
(b) Sanchi
(c) Shahbazgarhi
(d) Sohgaura
Answer: A
Kanaganahalli is about 3 km from Sannati,
Karnataka. An important excavation site
for Buddhist monuments. The most important
finding of the excavation include a stone
sculptured slab bearing the name Ranyo
Ashoko. The first inscribed portrait
of Ashoka (surrounded by female attendants
and queens) found at Kanaganahalli
Source: A History of Ancient and Early
Medieval India, Upinder Singh
3
8. Consider the following:
1. Deification of the Buddha
2. Treading the path of Bodhisattvas
3. Image worship and rituals
Which of the above is/are the feature/
features of Mahayana Buddhism?
(a) 1 only
(b) 1 and 2 only
(c) 2 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: D
Mahayana Buddhism is one of two main
existing branches of Buddhism (the other
being Theravada). It started considering
Buddha as a god rather than a great teacher
and began worshipping Buddha‘s images. It
also has a whole cosmology of gods and
goddesses as well as various Bodhisattvas
seeking complete enlightenment for the benefit
of all sentient beings. In fact, the teachings of
Mahayana are also nothing but treating the path
of various Bodhisattvas.
Source – A History of Ancient and Early
Medieval India, Upinder Singh. Chapter 8 –
Interactions and Innovations (200BCE-
200CE)
9. With reference to forced labour (Vishti) in
India during the Gupta period, which one of
the following statements is correct?
(a) It was considered a source of income for
the State, a sort of tax paid by the
people.
(b) It was totally absent in the Madhya
Pradesh and Kathiawar regions of the
Gupta Empire.
(c)The forced labourer was entitled to
weekly wages.
(d) The eldest son of the labourer was sent
as the forced labourer.
Answer: A
Vishti was form of forced labour extracted by
either state, provincial governor or local chief. It
is also mentioned on Gupta era copper
inscriptions that enlist variety of taxes.
Junagarh inscription mentions vishti as one
form of tax, which indicates that it was extracted
from Gujarat and Malwa region. Since it was a
forced labour in lieu of tax, it was not a wage
labour. Wage labour existed in ancient India but
it was not called vishti. Vishti could be extracted
from anyone, not in particular from eldest son
only.
Source: A History of Ancient and Medieval
India, Upinder Singh.
10. Building 'Kalyaana Mandapas' was a
notable feature in the temple construction in
the kingdom of
(a) Chalukya
(b) Chandela
(c) Rashtrakuta
(d) Vijayanagara
Answer: D
Kalyana Mandapas meant to celebrate divine
weddings was a notable feature of the
Vijaynagara Kingdom.
Source – Themes in Indian History II, Page
186
11. Consider the following statements:
1. In the revenue administration of Delhi
Sultanate, the in-charge of revenue
collection was known as'Amil'.
2. The Iqta system of Sultans of Delhi was
an ancient indigenous institution.
3. The office of 'Mir Bakshi' came into
existence during the reign of Khalji
Sultans of Delhi.
Which of the statements given above is/are
correct?
(a) 1 only
(b) 1 and 2 only
(c) 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: A
Amils were officers deputed to collect revenue
during the sultanate era in North India. Mir
Bakshi, on the other hand, was a Mughal high
office in charge of military pay and accounts.
Iqta system of land control was introduced in
India by the Delhi sultans. It was originally of
Central Asian and West Asian origin.
Source: Medieval India, NCERT Satish
Chandra
12. Consider the following statements:
1. Saint Nimbarka was a contemporary of
Akbar.
2. Saint Kabir was greatly influenced by
Shaikh Ahmad Sirhindi.
4
Which of the statements given above is/ are
correct?
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2
Answer: D
Both the statements are incorrect. Nimbarka
era is not exactly known but its sometime in
12
th
-13
th
century. Kabir belonged to the earlier
era than Sirhindi. Also, Sirhindi was Islamic,
Hanafi, scholar of Naqshbandi silsilah while
Kabir was the follower of Nirgun bhakti.
Source: Medieval India NCERT by Satish
Chandra
13. Which one of the following groups of plants
was domesticated in the 'New World' and
introduced into the 'Old World?
(a) Tobacco, cocoa and rubber
(b) Tobacco, cotton and rubber
(c) Cotton, coffee and sugarcane
(d) Rubber, coffee and wheat
Answer: A
Cotton was cultivate in India since ancient era.
Even Harappan era evidence of cotton
cultivation is found. So is wheat. Wheat has
been a widely cultivated crop in India since time
immemorial. However tobacco, cocoa and
rubber came to India through Europeans in the
late medieval or early modern era. All of them
originated in South America. This process is
termed as Columbian exchange (named for
Christopher Columbus). It was the widespread
transfer of plants, animals, culture, human
populations, technology, diseases, and ideas
between the Americas, West Africa, and the
Old World in the 15th and 16th centuries.
14. With reference to the British colonial rule in
India, consider the following statements:
1. Mahatma Gandhi was instrumental in
the abolition of the system of 'indentured
labour'.
2. In Lord Chelmsford's 'War Conference',
Mahatma Gandhi did not support the
resolution on recruiting Indians for World
War.
3. Consequent upon the breaking of salt
law by Indian people, the Indian
National Congress was declared illegal
by the colonial rulers.
Which of the statements given above are
correct?
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 1 and 3 only
(c) 2 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: B
Statement 1 and 3 are correct. Indentured
labour system soon died after Gandhi left South
Africa. Also, Gandhi‘s colleague C.f. Andrews
contributed in the abolition campaign.
Statement 2 is incorrect. Gandhi did support the
resolution on recruiting Indians for World War.
Source: Spectrum Modern India
15. With reference to Indian National
Movement, consider the following pairs:
Person Position held
Tej
Bahadur
Sapru
President, All India
Liberal Federation
K. C. Neogy Member, The
Constituent Assembly
P. C. Joshi General Secretary,
Communist Party of
India
Which of the pairs given above is/are
correctly matched?
(a) 1 only
(b) 1 and 2 only
(c) 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: D
Tej Bahadur Sapru was a
prominent Indian freedom fighter, lawyer and
politician. He was a key figure in India's struggle
for independence, helping draft the Indian
Constitution. He was the leader of the Liberal
party in British-ruled India. When the Montagu
report of 1918 was made public, there was a
divide in the Congress over it. The moderates
welcomed it while the extremists opposed it.
This led to a schism in the Congress with
moderate leaders forming the "Indian National
Liberal Federation" in 1919. The party (INLF)
was founded by Surendra Nath Banarjea and
some of its prominent leaders were Tej
Bahadur Sapru, V. S. Srinivasa Sastri and M.
5
R. Jayakar. Tej Bahadur Sapru emerged as the
most important leader among the Liberals.
KC Neogy, was a politician from West Bengal.
He was a member of the Constituent Assembly
of India, member of the first Cabinet of
independent India and the chairman of the first
Finance Commission of India.
PC Joshi was one of the early leaders of the
communist movement in India. He was the first
general secretary of the Communist Party of
India from 1935–47.
Source: Modern India Spectrum
16. With reference to Mian Tansen, which one
of the following statements is not correct?
(a) Tansen was the title given to him by
Emperor Akbar.
(b) Tansen composed Dhrupads on Hindu
gods and goddesses.
(c) Tansen composed songs on his
patrons.
(d) Tansen invented many Ragas.
Answer: A
Tansen was the title given to him by Raja
Vikramjit of Gwalior. Tansen was a court
musician in the darbar of Raja Ramachandra of
Bandavagarh (Rewa).
17. Who among of the following Mughal
Emperors shifted emphasis from illustrated
manuscripts to album and individual
portrait?
(a) Humayun
(b) Akbar
(c) Jahangir
(d) Shah Jahan
Answer: C
18. Consider the following pairs:
Famous place River
1. Pandharpur Chandrabhaga
2. Tiruchirappalli Cauvery
3. Hampi Malaprabha
Which of the pairs given above are correctly
matched?
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 2 and 3 only
(c) 1 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: A
1. Located on the bank of the Tungabhadra
River, Hampi was the Vijaynagar Capital. It
is famous for many temples lik e Virupaksha
Temple, Vithala Temple and Nandi Statue.
2. Pandharpur is a well-known pilgrimage town
on the banks of Chandrabhaga River in
Maharashtra
3. Tiruchirappalli is situated on the banks of
the river. It was a citadel of the early Cholas
which later fell to the Pallavas.
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