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Rural Life and Society Online Test 8th Social Science Lesson 3 Questions in English

Rural Life and Society Online Test 8th Social Science Lesson 3 Questions in English

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Question 1
The pre colonial India was predominantly depended on
A
Trade
B
Agriculture
C
Mining
D
None of the above
Question 1 Explanation: 
In the pre-colonial period, Indian economy was predominantly an agrarian economy. Agriculture was then the primary occupation of the people and even industries like textiles, sugar, oil, etc. were dependent on it.
Question 2
Which of the following type of land revenue settlement was introduced by british?
A
Permanent Settlement
B
Mahalwari system
C
Ryotwari system
D
All the above
Question 2 Explanation: 
British Government introduced three major land revenue and tenurial systems in India, namely, the Permanent Settlement, the Mahalwari system and the Ryotwari system. The economic exploitation of the peasants let to the revolt in future.
Question 3
Who introduced the system of Ryotwari land revenue settlement?
A
Lord Cornwallis
B
Thomas Munro
C
Lord William Bentinck
D
All the above
Question 4
When was diwani of begal was attained by Robert clive?
A
1773
B
1752
C
1765
D
1793
Question 4 Explanation: 
When Robert Clive obtained the Diwani of Bengal, Bihar and Orissa in 1765, there used to be an annual settlement (of land revenue).
Question 5
Who changed annual settlement from annual to quinquennial (five-yearly) and back to annual again?
A
Robert clive
B
Warren hastings
C
Cornwallis
D
Both a and b
Question 5 Explanation: 
Warren Hastings changed it from annual to quinquennial (five-yearly) and back to annual again. During the time of Cornwallis, a ten years’ (decennial) settlement was introduced in 1793 and it was known Permanent Settlement.
Question 6
Where was the permanent land revenue settlement implemented?
A
Bengal
B
Bihar
C
Orissa
D
All the above
Question 6 Explanation: 
Permanent settlement were made in Bengal, Bihar, Orissa, Varanasi division of U.P., and Northern Karnataka, which roughly covered 19 percent of the total area of British India.
Question 7
What was the other names of Permanent settlement?
A
Jagirdari
B
Malguzari
C
Biswedari
D
All the above
Question 7 Explanation: 
Permanent settlement was known by different names like Zamindari, Jagirdari, Malguzari and Biswedari.
Question 8
Who were considered as owners of the land in permanent land revenue settlement?
A
Peasants
B
Consumers
C
Zamindars
D
Both a and b
Question 8 Explanation: 
The Zamindars were recognised as the owners of land as long as they paid the revenue to the East India Company regularly. The Zamindars acted as the agent of the Government for the collection of revenue from the cultivators.
Question 9
The amount of revenue that the Zamindars had to pay to the Company was
A
Variable
B
Fixed
C
Changed intermittently
D
None of the above
Question 9 Explanation: 
The amount of revenue that the Zamindars had to pay to the Company was firmly fixed and would not be raised under any circumstances. They gave 10/11 of the revenue collected by them from the cultivator to the Government.
Question 10
Who grants patta to ryots under permanent land revenue settlements?
A
British collector
B
Zamindars
C
Both a and b
D
None of the above
Question 10 Explanation: 
The Zamindars would grant patta (written agreements) to the ryots. The ryots became tenants since they were considered the tillers of the soil. All judicial powers were taken away from the Zamindars.
Question 11
Find the merits of permanent land revenue settlement from the following?
A
Under this system many of the waste lands and forests became cultivable lands.
B
The Zamindars were made free from the responsibility of providing justice.
C
This system secured a fixed and stable income for the British Government.
D
All the above
Question 11 Explanation: 
Under this system many of the waste lands and forests became cultivable lands. The Zamindars became the owner of the land.The Zamindars were made free from the responsibility of providing justice. The Zamindars remained faithful to the British Government. This system secured a fixed and stable income for the British Government.
Question 12
Find the demerits of permanent land revenue settlement from the following?
A
The rights of the cultivators were ignored and they were left at the mercy of the Zamindars.
B
This system was made the Zamindars lethargic and luxurious.
C
Many conflicts between the zamindars and the peasants arose in rural Bengal
D
All the above
Question 12 Explanation: 
The British Government had no direct contact with the cultivators. The rights of the cultivators were ignored and they were left at the mercy of the Zamindars.The peasants were almost treated as serfs.This system was made the Zamindars lethargic and luxurious.Many conflicts between the zamindars and the peasants arose in rural Bengal.
Question 13
Ryotwari system was introduced by
A
Thomas Munro
B
Captain Read
C
Warren hasitngs
D
Both a and b
Question 13 Explanation: 
Ryotwari system was introduced by Thomas Munro and Captain Read in 1820.
Question 14
Which of the following areas does the ryotwari system was implemented?
A
Assam
B
Coorg
C
Bombay
D
All the above
Question 14 Explanation: 
Ryotwari system was introduced by Thomas Munro and Captain Read in 1820. Major areas of introduction of Ryotwari system included Madras, Bombay, parts of Assam, and Coorg provinces of British India.
Question 15
The rights of ownership of land under the ryotwari system was given to
A
Zamindars
B
Peasants
C
British
D
None
Question 15 Explanation: 
By Ryotwari system the rights of ownership was handed over to the peasants. British government collected taxes directly from the peasants.
Question 16
By whom the assessment was reduced to one-third of the produce?
A
Thomas Munro
B
Captain Read
C
Warren hasitngs
D
Both a and b
Question 16 Explanation: 
Initially, one- half of the estimated produce was fixed as rent. This assessment was reduced to one-third of the produce by Thomas Munro. The revenue was based on the basis of the soil and the nature of the crop.
Question 17
When does the rent for Land revised under ryotwari system?
A
Annually
B
Quarterly
C
After 10 years
D
After 10-20 years
Question 17 Explanation: 
Rents would be periodically revised, generally after 20 to 30 years. The position of the cultivators became more secure. In this system the settlement was made between the Government and the Ryots. Infact, the Government later claimed that the land revenue was rent and not a tax.
Question 18
How much demand does the government fixed for ryotwari system?
A
90 – 95 %
B
40 – 45%
C
30 – 45%
D
None
Question 18 Explanation: 
Government fixed the demand at 45 to 55 percent of the produce. Revenue settlement was done directly with the ryots. Measurement of field and an estimate of produce was calculated.
Question 19
What are the effects of Ryotwari settlememt?
A
The land revenue fixed was excessive
B
the ryots were hardly left with bare maintenance even in the best of seasons
C
Under this system the government exploited the farmers instead of zamindars.
D
All the above
Question 19 Explanation: 
In most areas the land revenue fixed was excessive; the ryots were hardly left with bare maintenance even in the best of seasons. Under this system the government exploited the farmers instead of zamindars.
Question 20
Which of the following is the modified version of Zamindari system?
A
Permanent land revenue system
B
Ryotwari system
C
Mahalwari system
D
All the above
Question 20 Explanation: 
Mahalwari system, a brain child of Holt Mackenzie was modified version of the Zamindari settlement introduced in the Ganga valley, the North-West Province, parts of the Central India and Punjab in 1822.
Question 21
Under whose guidance Lord William bentick suggested changes in Mahalwari system?
A
Robert martins bird
B
Kary finch
C
Kosidion
D
None of the above
Question 21 Explanation: 
Lord William Bentinck was tosuggest radical changes in the Mahalwari system by the guidance of Robert Martins Bird in 1833. Assessment of revenue was to be made on the basis of the produce of a Mahal or village.
Question 22
Who is responsible to pay the revenue under Mahalwari settlement?
A
Headman
B
Lambrador
C
Zamindar
D
Both a and b
Question 22 Explanation: 
All the proprietors of a Mahal were severally and jointly responsible for the payment of revenue. Initially the state share was fixed two-thirds of the gross produce. Bentinck, therefore, reduced to fifty percent. The village as a whole, through its headman or Lambardar, was required to pay the revenue.
Question 23
The system of Mahalwari settlement was implemented in
A
Agra
B
Awadh
C
United provinces
D
All the above
Question 23 Explanation: 
Mahalwari settlement system was first adopted in Agra and Awadh, and later extended to other parts of the United Provinces. The burden of all this heavy taxation finally fell on the cultivators.
Question 24
According to Mahalwari settlement who is considered as owner of the land?
A
Ryots
B
Zamindars
C
Village community
D
All the above
Question 24 Explanation: 
The village community was the owner of the village common land. The village land belonged to the village community. The Lambardar acted as intermediaries between the Government and the villagers. It was a village-wise assessment. One person could hold a number of villages.
Question 25
What are all the effects of Mahalwari settlements from the following?
A
The Lambardar enjoyed privileges which was misused for their self-interest.
B
This system brought no benefit to the cultivators.
C
It was a modified version of the Zamindari system and benefited the upper class in villages.
D
All the above
Question 25 Explanation: 
The Lambardar enjoyed privileges which was misused for their self-interest. This system brought no benefit to the cultivators. It was a modified version of the Zamindari system and benefited the upper class in villages.
Question 26
What does the land revenue system of the British impacted on
A
Increase in land sales
B
Dispossession
C
Movement of the people
D
Both a and b
Question 26 Explanation: 
A common feature of all the settlements was the assessment and the maximize income from land. It resulted in increasing land sales and dispossession.
Question 27
Who acquired the lands of ryots due to the land revenue settlements?
A
Zamindars
B
Money lenders
C
British
D
All the above
Question 27 Explanation: 
The peasants were overburdened with taxation. Due to the tax burden and famines, in general, the people suffered in poverty and burdened with debts. They had to seek the moneylenders who became rich and acquired lands from the peasants.
Question 28
As a result of land revenue settlement, which of the following got affected?
A
Mining
B
Cottage industries
C
Agriculture
D
Agriculture
Question 28 Explanation: 
Cottage industries disappeared on account of the import of British goods and the peasants had nothing to supplement their income. The stability and continuity of the Indian villages was shaken. The Zamindars, money-lenders and lawyers exploited the poor peasants.
Question 29
The British policy of settlement proved advantageous only to
A
Government
B
Privileged section of a society
C
Cultivators
D
Both a and b
Question 29 Explanation: 
The British policy proved advantageous only to the government of a privileged section of the society at the cost of the cultivators who were the rightful owners of their lands and claimants of the larger share of the produce. The old body of custom was replaced by new apparatus of law, courts, fees, lawyers and formal procedures.
Question 30
When does the Santhal rebellion took place?
A
1855-56
B
1899-00
C
1886-87
D
1802-22
Question 30 Explanation: 
The various peasant movements and uprisings during the 19th and 20th centuries were in the nature of a protest against of the existing conditions under which their exploitation knew no limits. The first revolt which can be regarded as peasants’ revolt was the Santhal Rebellion in 1855-56.
Question 31
Where does the Santhal rebellion took place i.e., relating to which place?
A
Deccan plateau
B
Rajmahal hills
C
Ganges valley
D
None of the above
Question 31 Explanation: 
The land near the hills of Rajmahal in Bihar was cultivated by the Santhals. The landlords and money-lenders from the cities took advantage of their ignorance and began grabbing their lands. This created bitter resentment among them leading to their armed uprising in 1855.
Question 32
Under whose leadership does the Santhal organized the rebellion?
A
Siddhu
B
Kanhu
C
Pihu
D
Both a and b
Question 32 Explanation: 
Consequently, under the belief of a divine order, around 10,000 Santals gathered under two Santhal brothers, Siddhu and Kanhu, to free their country of the foreign oppressors and set up a government of their own. The rebellion assumed a formidable shapewithin a month. The houses of the European planters, British officers, railway engineers, zamindars and money-lenders were attacked.
Question 33
When was the Santhal rebellion came to an end?
A
February 1856
B
March 1856
C
May 1856
D
None of the above
Question 33 Explanation: 
The rebellion continued till February 1856, when the rebel leaders were captured and the movement was put down with a heavy hand. The government declared the Parganas inhabited by them as Santhal Parganas so that their lands and identity could be safeguarded from external encroachments.
Question 34
Which of the following revolt/rebellion were most violent and widespread uprisings?
A
Mopallah rebellion
B
Indigo revolt
C
Pabna revolt
D
Santhal rebellion
Question 34 Explanation: 
The Bengal indigo cultivators strike was the most militant and widespread peasant uprisings. The European indigo planters compelled the tenant farmers to grow indigo at terms highly disadvantageous to the farmers.
Question 35
Who were the main persons to for the success of Indigo revolt?
A
Digambar Biswas
B
Digambar Biswas
C
Multan sultan
D
Both a and b
Question 35 Explanation: 
The tenant farmer was forced to sell it cheap to the planter and accepted advances from the planter that benefitted the latter. There were also cases of kidnapping, looting, flogging and burning. Led by Digambar Biswas and Bishnu Charan Biswas, the ryots of Nadia district gave up indigo cultivation in September 1859.
Question 36
When was the indigo commission formed by British government?
A
1862
B
1860
C
1865
D
1861
Question 36 Explanation: 
Factories were burnt down and the revolt spread. To take control of the situation, the Government set up an indigo commission in 1860 whose recommendations formed part of the Act VI of 1862. The indigo planters of Bengal, however, moved on to settle in Bihar and Uttar Pradesh.
Question 37
Which newspaper brought to light the misery of the cultivators several times?
A
Indian express
B
Swadeshamitran
C
Swadeshi
D
Hindu patriot
Question 37 Explanation: 
The newspaper, Hindu Patriot brought to light the misery of the cultivators several times. Dinabandhu Mitra wrote a drama, Nil-Darpan, in Bengali with a view to draw the attention of the people and the government towards the misery of the indigo-cultivators.
Question 38
Which of the following revolt was against the Zamindars?
A
Moplah revolt
B
Indigo revolt
C
Pabna revolt
D
Santhal rebellion
Question 38 Explanation: 
Pabna Peasant Uprising was a resistance movement by the peasants against the oppression of the Zamindars. It originated in the Yusufshahi pargana of Pabna in Bengal. It was led by Keshab Chandra Roy.
Question 39
Where did the Pabna revolt spread to?
A
East Bengal
B
Punjab
C
Jabalpur
D
Delhi
Question 39 Explanation: 
Large crowds of peasants gathered and marched through villages frightening the zamindars and appealing to other peasants to join with them. Funds were raised from the ryots to meet the costs. The struggle gradually spread throughout Pabna and then to the other districts of East Bengal. Everywhere agrarian leagues were organized.
Question 40
Where does the deccan riots took place?
A
Mumbai
B
Pune
C
Jharkand
D
None of the above
Question 40 Explanation: 
In 1875, the peasants revolted in the district of Poona, that event has been called the ‘Deccan Riots’. The peasants revolted primarily against the oppression of local moneylenders who were grabbing their lands systematically. The uprising started from a village in Poona district when the village people forced out a local moneylender from the village and captured his property.
Question 41
Which Act removed some of the most serious grievances of the peasants?
A
Pitts India act
B
Magna carta
C
Deccan agriculturalist relief act
D
Both a and c
Question 41 Explanation: 
Gradually, the uprising spread over 33 villages and the peasants looted the property of Marwari Sahukars. The uprising turned into violent when the Sahukars took help of the police. It was suppressed only when the army was called to control it. However, it resulted in passing of the Deccan Agriculturists Relief Act’ which removed some of the most serious grievances of the peasants.
Question 42
Which of the following movement agitated to prevent the rapid alienation of their lands to the urban moneylenders for failure to pay debts?
A
Deccan riots
B
Pabna riot
C
Santhal rebellion
D
Punjab peasant movement
Question 42 Explanation: 
The peasants of the Punjab agitated to prevent the rapid alienation of their lands to the urban moneylenders for failure to pay debts. The Government of India did not want any revolt in that province which provided a large number of soldiers to the British army in India. In order to protect the peasants of the Punjab, the Punjab Land Alienation Act was passed in 1900 “as an experimental measure” to be extended to the rest of India if it worked successfully in the Punjab.
Question 43
When did Champaran satyagraha took place?
A
1917
B
1921
C
1915
D
1916
Question 43 Explanation: 
Champaran Satyagraha (1917-18) The European planters of Champaran in Bihar resorted to illegal and inhuman methods of indigo cultivation at a cost which was wholly unjust. Under the Tinkathia system in Champaran, the peasants were bound by law to grow indigo on 3/20 part of their land and send the same to the British planters at prices fixed by them.
Question 44
Who was part of Government appointed enquiry commission for Champaran satyagraha?
A
Motilal Nehru
B
Jawaharlal Nehru
C
Gandhi
D
Godse
Question 44 Explanation: 
The Government appointed an enquiry commission of which Mahatma Gandhi was a member. The grievances of the peasants were enquired and ultimately the Champaran Agrarian Act was passed in May 1918.
Question 45
When did Kheda satyagraha took place?
A
1917
B
1918
C
1919
D
1920
Question 45 Explanation: 
In the Kheda District of Gujarat, due to constant famines, agriculture failed in 1918, but the officers insisted on collection of full land revenue. The local peasants, therefore, started a ‘no-tax’ movement in Kheda district in 1918. Gandhi accepted the leadership of this movement.
Question 46
Who was the hero of the Kaira satyagraha?
A
Motilal Nehru
B
Mahatma Gandhi
C
Netaji
D
Both a and b
Question 46 Explanation: 
Gandhiji organised the peasants to offer Satyagraha and opposed official insistence on full collection of oppressive land revenue despite the conditions of famine. He inspired the peasants to be fearless and face all consequences. The response to his call was unprecedented and the government had to bow to a settlement with the peasants. Sardar Vallabhai Patel emerged as an important leader of the Indian freedom struggle during this period.
Question 47
_____ peasants of Malabar (Kerala) was suppressed and exploited by the Hindu zamindars (Jenmis) and British government.
A
Christians
B
Oppressed people
C
Muslim moplahs
D
None of the above
Question 47 Explanation: 
The Muslim Moplah (or Moplah) peasants of Malabar (Kerala) was suppressed and exploited by the Hindu zamindars (Jenmis) and British government. This was the main cause of this revolt. The Moplah peasants got momentum from the Malabar District Conference, held in April 1920.
Question 48
When did the Moplah rebellion actually took place?
A
August 1921
B
March 1921
C
June 1921
D
January 1921
Question 48 Explanation: 
In August 1921, the Moplah tenants rebelled against the oppressive zamindars. In the initial phase of the rebellion, the Moplah peasants attacked the police stations, public offices, communications and houses of oppressive landlords and moneylenders. By December 1921, the government ruthlessly suppressed the Moplah rebellion.
Question 49
When did the Bardoli satyagraha took place?
A
1929
B
1940
C
1902
D
1922
Question 49 Explanation: 
In 1928, the peasants of Bardoli (Gujarat) started their agitation under the leadership of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, in protest against the government’s proposal to increase land revenue by 30 percent. The peasants refused to pay tax at the enhanced rate and started no-tax campaign from 12 February 1928. Many women also participated in this campaign.
Question 50
When did all their lands was returned to them to the people of Gujarat?
A
1933
B
1933
C
1937
D
1940
Question 50 Explanation: 
In 1930, the peasants of Bardoli rose to a man, refused to pay taxes, faced the auction sales and the eventual loss of almost all of their lands but refused to submit to the Government. However, all their lands were returned to them when the Congress came to power in 1937.
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