Q1: What is common in the two prints—a Kalamkari print and a Morris cotton print?
Ans: There is one thing common in the two prints: both use a rich blue colour – commonly called indigo.
Q2: Where did the Spanish begin cultivating indigo?
Ans: The Spanish began cultivating indigo in Venezuela.
Q3: Where did the English cultivate indigo?
Ans: The English cultivated indigo in Jamaica.
Q4: What is indigo?
Ans: Indigo is a tropical plant which was formerly widely cultivated as a source of dark blue dye.
Q5: Who were the lathiyals?
Ans: Lathiyals were the lathi-wielding strongmen maintained by the planters.
Q6: Where did the slave revolt take place in 1791?
Ans: In the French colony of St Domingue situated in the Caribbean islands, the African slaves who worked in plantations rebelled in 1791.
Q7: Which tragedy occurred during 1770 in Bengal?
Ans: In 1770, a terrible famine killed ten million people in Bengal. About one-third of the population was wiped out.
Q8: Who gave the extensive description of Caribbean islands?
Ans: Jean Baptiste Labat wrote extensively about Caribbean islands.
Q9: Who was the President of the Indigo Commission?
Ans: W. S. Seton Karr was the President of the Indigo Commission.
Q10: Who and when did the Permanent Settlement introduced in Bengal?
Ans: The Permanent Settlement was introduced by Lord Cornwallis in 1793.
Q11: Where did the Portuguese begin cultivating indigo?
Ans: The Portuguese began cultivating indigo in Brazil.
Q12: Who were the gomasthas?
Ans: Gomasthas were the agents of planters.
Q13: Why did cloth dyers prefer indigo to woad?
Ans: Cloth dyers, however, preferred indigo as a dye because Indigo produced a rich blue colour, whereas the dye from woad was pale and dull.
Q14: Who was William Morris?
Ans: William Morris, a famous poet and artist of nineteenth-century Britain.
Q15: Who created Kalamkari print?
Ans: Weavers of Andhra Pradesh in India created Kalamkari print.
Q1: What was nij cultivation?
Ans: Within the system of nij cultivation, the planter produced indigo in lands that he directly controlled. He either bought the land or rented it from other zamindars and produced indigo by directly employing hired labourers.
Q2: What were the causes of Champaran Movement?
Ans: When Mahatma Gandhi returned from South Africa, a peasant from Bihar persuaded him visit Champaran and see the plight of the indigo cultivators there. Mahatma Gandhi’s visit in 1917 marked the beginning of the Champaran movement against the indigo planters.
Q3: How did indigo trade attract foreign traders?
Ans: As the indigo trade grew, commercial agents and officials of the Company began investing in indigo production. Over the years many Company officials left their jobs to look after their indigo business. Attracted by the prospect of high profits, numerous Scotsmen and Englishmen came to India and became planters.
Q4: Why were Bengal artisans deserting villages?
Ans: Artisans were deserting villages since they were being forced to sell their goods to the Company at low prices. Peasants were unable to pay the dues that were being demanded from them.
Q5: What problems did zamindars face under the Permanent Settlement?
Ans: The revenue that had been fixed was so high that the zamindars found it difficult to pay. Anyone who failed to pay the revenue lost his zamindari. Numerous zamindaris were sold off at auctions organised by the Company.
Q6: By the late nineteenth century, the Company forced cultivators in various parts of India to produce which crops?
Ans: The British persuaded or forced cultivators in various parts of India to produce other crops: jute in Bengal, tea in Assam, sugarcane in the United Provinces (now Uttar Pradesh), wheat in Punjab, cotton in Maharashtra and Punjab, rice in Madras.
Q7: Give two problems which arose with the new Munro system of fixing revenue.
Ans: Two problems which arose with the new Munro system of fixing revenue were:
Q4: Describe the main features of the Permanent Settlement.
Ans: Main features of the Permanent Settlement
Q5: What were the circumstances which led to the eventual collapse of indigo production in Bengal?
Ans: The circumstances which led to the eventual collapse of indigo production in Bengal were:
Q6: Explain how the Bengal economy landed up in a crisis under the Diwani of the Company.
Ans: After the Company became the Diwan of Bengal it began its efforts to increase the revenue as much as it could and buy fine cotton and silk cloth as cheaply as possible. Within five years the value of goods bought by the Company in Bengal doubled. Before 1865, the Company had purchased goods in India by importing gold and silver from Britain. Now the revenue collected in Bengal could finance the purchase of goods for export. This caused huge loss of revenue for Bengal which paralysed its economy.
Q7: What were the consequences of the economic crisis that gripped Bengal?
Ans: Consequences of the economic crisis that gripped Bengal
Q8: What was the Munro system?
Ans: The new system that was devised came to be known as the ryotwar (or ryotwari). It was tried on a small scale by Captain Alexander Read in some of the areas that were taken over by the Company after the wars with Tipu Sultan. Subsequently developed by Thomas Munro, this system was gradually extended all over south India. Read and Munro felt that in the south there were no traditional zamindars. The settlement, they argued, had to be made directly with the cultivators (ryots) who had tilled the land for generations. Their fields had to be carefully and separately surveyed before the revenue assessment was made.
Q9: Give a brief description of the Mahalwari System.
Ans: In the North Western Provinces of the Bengal Presidency, an Englishman called Holt Mackenzie devised the new system which came into effect in 1822. He felt that the village was an important social institution in north Indian society and needed to be preserved. Under his directions, collectors went from village to village, inspecting the land, measuring the fields, and recording the customs and rights of different groups. The estimated revenue of each plot within a village was added up to calculate the revenue that each village (mahal) had to pay. This demand was to be revised periodically, not permanently fixed. The charge of collecting the revenue and paying it to the Company was given to the village headman. This system came to be known as the mahalwari settlement.
Q10: Why did the indigo cultivators decide to rebel? How did they show their anger?
Ans: The condition under which the indigo cultivators had to work was intensely oppressive. Finally they decided not to grow indigo. They became united and rebelled. They showed their anger in the following ways:
Q11: Describe different stages of the production of indigo.
Ans: After harvest, the indigo plant was taken to the vats in the indigo factory. Three or four vats were needed to manufacture the dye. Each vat had a separate function. The leaves stripped off the indigo plant were first soaked in warm water in a vat for several hours. When the plants fermented, the liquid began to boil and bubble. Now the rotten leaves were taken out and the liquid drained into another vat that was placed just below the first vat. In the second vat the solution was continuously stirred and beaten with paddles. When the liquid gradually turned green and then blue, lime water was added to the vat. Gradually the indigo separated out in flakes, a muddy sediment settled at the bottom of the vat and a clear liquid rose to the surface. The liquid was drained off and the sediment – the indigo pulp – transferred to another vat (known as the settling vat), and then pressed and dried for sale.
Q12: Why were ryots reluctant to grow indigo?
Ans: Ryots were reluctant to grow indigo because of the following reasons.
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1. What were the main features of the British colonial rule in the countryside? |
2. How did the British policies impact the Indian farmers? |
3. What was the role of zamindars in the British administration? |
4. How did the British colonial rule alter traditional land ownership patterns in India? |
5. What were the consequences of cash crop cultivation in rural India under British rule? |