Tag: peasants and adivasi revolts

Questions Related to peasants and adivasi revolts

In many parts of England, the farmers began to grow turnip as-
(i) Turnip improved the soil and made it fertile.
(ii) Turnip was a good fodder crop and relished by the cattle.
(iii) This crop had the capacity to increase nitrogen content of the soil.
(iv) Turnip became the staple food for the people.
Read the options given above and select the correct answer from the following. 

  1. (i), (iii), (iv) are correct and (ii) is wrong

  2. (i), (ii), (iv) are correct and (iii) is wrong

  3. (i), (ii), (iii) are correct and (iv) is wrong

  4. All the above options are correct


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

In many parts of England, the farmers began to grow turnip as-

  • Turnip improved the soil and made it fertile.
  • Turnip was a good fodder crop and relished by the cattle.
  • This crop had the capacity to increase nitrogen content of the soil.

Why did poor peasants resort to riots to protest against the use of threshing machines?

  1. Threshing machines had become a sign of unemployment and bad times.

  2. They were opposed to machines.

  3. They found the machines too difficult to operate

  4. The peasants were too poor to buy threshing machines.

  5. None of these


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Riots spread over southern England and about 387 threshing machines were broken. Through this period, farmers received threatening letters urging them to stop using machines that deprived workmen of their livelihood. 

The Enclosure Movement was most essential for?

  1. Fencing the land to prevent the entry cattle

  2. For enjoying private ownership of land

  3. Planning crop rotation to improve the soil

  4. Encouraging farmers to grow crops


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

The Enclosure Movement was most essential for planning crop rotation to improve the soil.

By selling which of the following items to China, did the British regularly collect money for purchasing tea from that country?

  1. Opium

  2. Jute

  3. Cotton

  4. Sugar cane

  5. None of these


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Western merchants in the mid-eighteenth century began an illegal trade in opium. It was unloaded in a number of sea ports of south-eastern China and carried by local agents to the interiors. By the early 1820s, about 10,000 crates were being annually smuggled into China. While the English cultivated a taste for Chinese tea, the Chinese became addicted to opium. 

When did the white Americans move into the Mississippi Valley?

  1. Between $1750$ and $1850$

  2. Between $1830$ and $1832$

  3. Between $1820$ and $1850$

  4. Between $1771$ and $1850$


Correct Option: C

Match the List-I with List-II and select the correct response from the potions given thereafter:

List-I List-II
a) The British government established monopoly in opium trade in Bengal. 1) 1780s
b) The British government exported 50000 chests of opium from Bengal annually. 2) 1820s
c) Opium production in British occupied territories declined rapidly. 3) 1870
d) Village headmen started paying peasants for producing opium in advance. 4) 1773
  1. a-2, b-3, c-4, d-1

  2. a-4, b-3, c-2, d-1

  3. a-3, b-2, c-1, d-4

  4. a-1, b-2, c-4, d-3


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

  • The British East India Company established a monopoly on opium cultivation in the Indian province of Bengal, where they developed a method of growing opium poppies cheaply and abundantly so that they could sell it in china. It took place in 1773.
  • In the year 1870 British government exported 50,000 chests of opium from Bengal annually.
  • In 1820s opium production decreased rapidly in British occupied territories. Production increased in princely states and Rajasthan which are unoccupied territories because here, the local traders were offering much higher prices to peasants which made the peasants interested to grow opium.
  • In 1780s village headmen started paying peasants for producing opium in advance so as to attract poor farmers to grow opium.

In many parts of England, the farmers began to grow turnip as:
(i) Turnip improved the soil and made it fertile
(ii) Turnip was a good fodder crop and relished by the cattle
(iii) This crop had the capacity to increase nitrogen content of the soil
(iv) Turnip became the staple food for the people
  1. (i), (ii), (iv) are correct, (iii) is incorrect

  2. (i), (iii), (iv) are correct, (ii) is incorrect

  3. (i), (ii), (iii) are correct, (iv) is incorrect

  4. All options are correct


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

The European peasants had discovered that planting crops like clover and turnip improved the soil and made it more fertile. Turnip was a good fodder crop for cattle. These crops had the capacity to increase the nitrogen content of the soil. Nitrogen was important for crop growth. Cultivation of the same soil over a few years depleted the nitrogen in the soil and reduced its fertility. By restoring nitrogen, turnip and clover made the soil fertile once again