History of Modern India (Part-IV)
b) Cornwallis
b) Subsidiary Alliance
c) Mediatisation
b) commercialisation of agriculture
c) poor purchasing power of the people due to their extreme poverty and rise in prices
d) unremunerative agriculture and fall in agricultural production
b) removal of restrictions on intercaste marriages
c) penalisation of parties to a marriage in which the girl was below 14 or the boy was below 18 years of age
d) civil marriages
b) Shuja-ud-Daulah
c) Asaf-ud-daula
d) Saadat Khan
b) Begum Hazrat Mahal
c) Asaf-ud-daula
d) Begum Zeenat Mahal
b) Calcutta
c) Delhi
d) Allahabad
b) King of Jhansi
c) Madhav Rao Sindhia
b) Peasant uprisings
c) Civil uprisings
b) the peasants had no leadership and organisation
c) they grew out of local grievances
61. Who of
the following was for the first time designated as the Governor of
India
a) Clive b) Cornwallis
c) Warren
Hastings
d) Wellesley
62. The
master stroke of Lord Wellesley to establish British paramountcy
in India was
a) Doctrine
of Lapse b) Subsidiary Alliance
c) Mediatisation
d) Annexation of Indian States
63. The
death of millions of Indians in frequent famines which visited
India during the 19th century, were mainly due to
a) overall
shortage of food and its improper distributionb) commercialisation of agriculture
c) poor purchasing power of the people due to their extreme poverty and rise in prices
d) unremunerative agriculture and fall in agricultural production
64. Har
Bilas Sarda was instrumental in the passage of the famous Sarda Act of
1930, which provided for
a) enforcing
monogamyb) removal of restrictions on intercaste marriages
c) penalisation of parties to a marriage in which the girl was below 14 or the boy was below 18 years of age
d) civil marriages
65. The
Nawab of Awadh who permanently transferred his capital from
Faizabad to Lucknow was
a)
Safdarjangb) Shuja-ud-Daulah
c) Asaf-ud-daula
d) Saadat Khan
66. The
Revolt of 1857 in Awadh and Lucknow was led by
a) Wajid Ali
Shah b) Begum Hazrat Mahal
c) Asaf-ud-daula
d) Begum Zeenat Mahal
67. Queen
Victoria’s famous proclamation, transferring authority from the
East India Company to the Crown , was made from
a) London b) Calcutta
c) Delhi
d) Allahabad
68. Govind
Dhondu Pant, popularly known was Nanasaheb, and one of the
principal leaders of the Revolt of 1857, was the adopted heir
and successor of
a) Peshwa
Baji Rao II b) King of Jhansi
c) Madhav Rao Sindhia
d) Malhar Rao Holkar
69. During
the first hundred years of the British rule in India, people’s
resentment and opposition to the British policies mainly
surfaced in the form of
a) Tribal
uprisings b) Peasant uprisings
c) Civil uprisings
d) Both (a) and (b) above
70. The
peasant movements, revolts, riots, struggles, etc in 19th century,
India remained mainly localised because
a) they were
mainly directed against enhancement in rent, evictions, usurious
practices of moneylenders, etcb) the peasants had no leadership and organisation
c) they grew out of local grievances
d) the big
landlords were allies of the Birtish
ANSWER
61. c
|
62. b
|
63. c
|
64. c
|
65. c
|
66. b
|
67. d
|
68. a
|
69. d
|
70. c
|
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