History Optional Strategy by Nidhi Siwach 1
History Optional Strategy by Nidhi Siwach 1
Optional
Strategy
By:
Nidhi Siwach
AIR 83 CSE 2018
1
Before starting preparation know
the schools of Historiography
Orientalist historiography:
Indologists/Orientalist - 18-19th century European scholars
Brahamanical perspective of Sanskrit texts accepted without
critique
Social & religious institutions & traditions- critiqued
Indian society = Static + despotic
Confusion of race, religion & ethnicity
Exaggerate impact of foreign influence
Classification of Past- Hindu, Muslim & British period.
2
Nationalist Historiography:
Wove together data from texts, inscriptions, coins & other
material remains to show contours of ancient Indian past
Insistence on indigenous roots of cultural development
search for Golden age Vedic ae & Gupta age
Contribution to political history South India brought into
narrative + study of regional politics
Discovery of non monarchical polities
Retained periodization of Hindu, Muslim, British
Communal tendency valorize Hindu period
3
Marxian Historiography
Shift from event centered political narrative to
delineation of social & economic structures & processes
especially class stratification & agrarian related
Uncovered non elite groups
Work with unilinear model of West
Texts sometimes read uncritically insufficient attention
to problematic chronology & peculiarities of genre
Class focused less attention to social stratifications such
as caste/gender
Religion & culture sidelined
4
Subaltern Historiography
Group of scholars interested in postcolonial and post
imperial societies
Ranajit Guha primary leader work on peasant
uprisings in India
Definition of subaltern by Ranajit Guha – “ the
demographic difference between the total Indian
population and all those whom we have described as
“elite”.
5
Paper- 1
Ancient History
6
1. Sources
Archaeological sources :
Exploration, excavation, epigraphy, numismatics,
monuments.
Prepare the sources along with the topic/period that you are
preparing. This will help in remembering the characteristics,
better presentation, awareness and better analysis as nowadays
trend in shifting towards analytical questions + this will help in
map work
For Numismatics and monuments also focus on evolution of style
from one period to other, the kind of material used, the motifs (
as they symbolise the cultural+ societal and political aspects)
Also prepare standard questions-
How inscriptions/coins act as source of history?
How they reflect the cultural evolution?
How they help in reconstruction of history?
Coins, excavation and inscriptions help in reconstructing the bygone
7
times. Justify/elaborate/discuss.
Literary sources:
Indigenous: Primary and secondary; poetry, scientific
literature, literature, literature in regional languages,
religious literature.
Prepare 2 or 3 literary sources for each period and the
dimensions that they cover
for e.g. Vedic era- Vedic hymns, Puranas, Buddhist Jatakas,
epics, Jain texts, Sangam literature, Shruti text, Smriti text,
Arthashastra
While reading the literary sources focus on
Society division of labour & hierarchy
Economic activities
Land hereditary/ownership
Position of social groups Varna system, women, untouchables
Language divisions upper castes speaking Sanskrit, women and
others Prakrit
Rise of literature in regional language + epigraphs in
Sanskrit/Khroshti/Pali/Prakrit
8
Foreign account:
Greek
Megasthene’s Indica – Seleucus’ envoy to the court of
Chandragupta Maurya
Arrian, Justin & Strabbo- quoted works of Megasthenes in
their subsequent works while original work has been lost.
Periplus of Erythrean Sea and Ptolemy’s geography- valuable
data for study of ancient geography & commerce
Greek & Roman accounts mention about Indian ports and
enumerate the items of trade between India and Roman
empire
9
Chinese
Fa Hien – Record of Buddhist countries,-indirect
references to polity, more focussed on Buddhist centres-
describes fourth-fifth century
Hsuan Tsang- Buddhist records of Western World-
describes Buddhist shrines, Buddhism, describes the social,
economic & religious conditions in seventh century- reign
of Harsha
Itsing – Record of Budhdhistic religion- refers to Sri
Gupta, valuable for studying North India in seventh
century
10
Arab writers.
11
2. Pre-history and Proto-
history
Geographical factors; hunting and gathering
(Palaeolithic and Mesolithic); Beginning of agriculture
(Neolithic and chalcolithic).
Focus on why most of settlements near the rivers,
development of rock shelters
Lifestyle how the transition happened from nomadic to
sedentary stone tools, paintings and archaeological
evidences
Cover the geographical spread, settlement patterns, then
the subsistence economy (agriculture, animal husbandry,
fishing, hunting)
Prepare historical sites as they are important for map work
13
3. Indus Valley Civilization :
Origin, date, extent, characteristics-decline, survival
and significance, art and architecture.
For origin part still there is debate whether the people
were indigenous or not. We have interpretations by
historians so prepare the justifications by 3-4 historians
and there point of view. As there is no concrete evidence
the origins can’t be concluded
Same thing will apply to date as there is no consensus for
exact time frame
Extent will vary throughout all four phases, have a rough
idea of the sites in the four phases and then eastward
movement
Characteristics will vary for all the four phases, but
prepare the characteristics phase wise with examples of
towns/settlements e.g. Harappa, Mohanjodaro,
Kalibangan. Characteristics will cover societal, economic
& cultural aspects also
14
Origin of IVC
John Marshall- long antecedent history
M Wheeler- migration of ideas & not people – idea of
civilization from the west
Chakraborti – transition from early to mature. IVC catalyzed
by craft specialization especially copper metallurgy +
agricultural growth
IVC type of state/empire
M.Wheeler- highly centralized, ruled by aristocratic priest
from twin capitals of Mohanjodaro & Harappa
S.C.Malik – Harappa as a chiefdom state
Shereen Ratnagar- IVC as an empire
Fairservis- IVC neither an empire nor a state but accepted
some element of centralized control & class structure.
15
Characteristics of IVC (Urban civilization)
Town planning
Great bath- Mohanjodaro
Naval dockyard- Lothal
Drainage system
Granary- Mohanjodaro
Art & architecture- dockyard, granaries, high degree of
workmanship, dancing girl, stone statue, pottery
Trade & commerce- seals
Citadel
Factories & workshop – discarded materials found in bulk
at one place
Seals & writing
16
Decline- there are multiple theories of decline-
Aryan invasion theory by M.Wheeler
Climate change theory- linking decline to change in monsoon
patterns by Ronojoy Adhikari
Natural disasters like floods, tectonic movements, shifting of
Indus as cause of decline by M.R. Sahni & George F Dalas
Ecological degradation theory – overexploitation of
environment due to overpopulation & degradation by
Fairservis
Survival & significance:
In religion & spiritual field- Pashupati’s resemblance to Shiva,
worship of people tree, humped bull, mother earth, discovery
of fire altars in Lothal & Kalibangan fire cult, still in
practice
Pottery patterns
House plan similarities
Lost wax method of sculpture manufacturing
Similarities in clothing
Beginning of binary & decimal; measurements & weights
Trade
17
4. Megalithic Cultures :
(Chakraborti has mentioned in detail)
Distribution of pastoral and farming cultures outside the Indus,
Development of community life, Settlements, Development of
agriculture, Crafts, Pottery, and Iron industry.
Extent- Deccan, Vindhya, Aravalli ranges & North west; important
sites- Maski, Hallur, T Narsipur, Nagarjunakonda, Adichannallur
Megalithic sites as burial sites or commemorative memorials
Emergence of ruling elite who presided over a surplus economy
Features:
Beginning of sedentary life- agriculture, hunting, fishing, animal
husbandry, craft traditions
Widespread use of Iron- artefacts present
Well developed tradition of specialised crafts- bead making, Cu & Bronze
artefacts
Development of metallurgy
Beginning of trade- centres of craft production, networks of exchange,
location on trade routes, interregional trade
Rock paintings- fighting scenes, cattle rids, hunting scenes, group dance
etc.
Community work
18
Settlement patterns
Villages sizeable population urban bias
Houses thatched or reed roofs supported on wooden post, Maski- postholes found
Close to irrigation tanks (rain fed/stream fed) intensive agriculture
River valleys/basins black/red sandy/loamy soil
Rainfall zones with 600-1500mm
Initially thought as settlement of nomadic people now clear evidences of sedentary
lifestyle
Subsistence economy
Iron industry
Tools found with grave goods as well as independently at various sites
Range of artefacts indicate wide range of occupations practiced- carpenters,
cobblers, bamboo craftsmen, lapidaries engaged in gemstone work, blacksmith,
coppersmith, goldsmith
References found in Sangam literature
References in Manimekalai- Buddhist epic
Chakraborti discards claim of iron being introduced by Indo- Aryans as ores suitable
for preindustrial smelting are found in all parts of subcontinent leaving aside alluvial
river valleys.
Debate over impact of iron technology- DD Koshambi (eastward movement to reach
iron ores of South Bihar), R.S.Sharma (role of iron axes in clearing the forest),
Makhan Lal (RS Sharma’s concept of clearance with iron axe+ agricultural surplus a
myth; Ganga plain heavily forested till 16-17th century) 19
5. Aryans and Vedic Period
Expansions of Aryans in India:
Extent of their spread and eastward movement- gradual
spread from sapta Sindhu to Brahmavarta; areas- Delhi,
Meerut, Kosala, Kashi, North Bihar etc.
Literary evidences – Vedic literature- mentions of
geographical spread, socio economic & religious life, gods
& goddesses, assemblies- sabha/samiti, occupations-
cattle rearing, agriculture, craft making, carpentry;
references to forts, walled cities etc.
Archaeological evidences – sapta Sindhu still exists except
Sarasvati; painted grey ware pottery- extensive
distribution mainly across Indus- Gangetic divide; PGW
sites; iron objects; evidences of cultivation; bones of
cattle, sheep, pig etc.
20
Vedic Period: Religious and philosophic literature;
Transformation from Rig Vedic period to the later Vedic
period;
Contribution to secular literature : conception of time,
political history reconstruction (Vayu/Matsya/Vishnu purana
mention about Nandas, Maurya, Shunga, Kanva, Andhra etc;
historical geography; Intermingling Of culture – Brahamanical
and non Brahamanical
Religious literature- Puranas, Vedic hymns With focus on
nature worship
Philosophical literature – Six philosophies
Nyaya- philosophy of logic and reasoning
Vaiseshika- Essence of things
Samkhya- non theistic Dualism
Yoga- self discipline for self realization
Mimansa- reflection of Dharma
Vedanta- Conclusion of Vedic revelation.
21
Political, social and economical life;
Political- change from pastoral to sedentary, rise of kingship and
hierarchy.
Early v/s later Vedic period:
Transition pastoral to agriculture based
Change in importance of deities from early to later
Increased importance of sacrifices and rituals
Rise of Varna system and deterioration of condition of women
Social life Economic life
Sedentary society Agriculture as mainstay
Varna system Service groups
Varnashram system Industry related occupations
Condition of women & slaves- Trade
degraded from early to later
Disease & cure- reliance on Coinage
nature
Food & clothing patterns- dhoti, Metal usage 22
25
Iranian and Macedonian invasions and their impact.
26
7. Mauryan Empire
Foundation of the Mauryan Empire, Chandragupta, Kautilya and
Arthashastra; Ashoka; Concept of Dharma; Edicts; Polity, Administration,
Economy; Art, architecture and sculpture; External contacts; Religion;
Spread of religion; Literature.
For Ashoka’s concept of Dharma there are different interpretations by
different scholars – RC majumdar equated it to Budhdhism, Romila Thapar
mentions it as an invention by Ashoka for empires consolidation, N Shastri
interprets it as ethical code of conduct, While some historians view it as a
humanistic concept
Edicts try to remember the important edicts and their content- no need to
memorize all focus on ¾ famous edicts
Sources will be Ashoka's edicts, Arthashastra, Megasthenes Indica, Buddhist
texts, Dipavamsa & mahavamsa, Milindapanho , Vishakhadutta’s
Mudrarakshasha for analytical questions
For the question on kind of polity- different historians have different
interpretations so better to quote the historians and leave the answer open
ended
Centralized polity- Arthashastra mentions it
Romila Thapar- empire as two parts- metropolitan under direct control &
peripheral- sphere of influence not under direct control
27
Gerard Fusman- given the extent plus technology of the time centralized not
possible, plus local level initiative present as seen in scripts and Language
Disintegration of the empire; sungas and Kanvas.
Disintegration – can Ashoka’s Pacifist policies be blamed?; Role of
successors, Internal factors (large empire, issues in
communication, weak successors, division of empire, patronage
to Buddhist, sidelining of Brahmans- Brahamanical revolution?) ;
External Factors ( Bactrian Greek invasion)
Sungas & Kanvas – focus more on the continuity and variation in
socio political, economic & religious domains from Mauryan
empire; changes brought out by them; role played by them in
long run; revival of Brahmanism
Besnagar pillar inscription Of Helidorus mentions in detail about
the Shunga period
Jatakas and Milindapanho mentions about them
B.D.Chattopadhyaya mentions about numismatic evidences of
multiple kingdoms between the fall of Mauryas and rise of
Satavahanas
28
8. Post-Mauryan Period (Indo-
Greeks, Sakas, Kushanas,
Western Kshatrapas)
Contact with outside world; growth of urban centres, economy,
coinage, development of religions, Mahayana, social conditions,
art, architecture, culture, literature and science.
Prepare schools of art- Gandhara, Mathura & Amaravati in detail,
their comparison
Coinage- how it reflected the political-religious- economic
condition; new features added by Greeks- gold coins + double
strike, mentioning the era, image of ruler & deities etc.
Mahayana school- features, significance of motifs, texts,
similarities and differences from Brahmanism; sources- inscriptions
from monastic sites, Chinese pilgrims, writings of thinkers as
Nagarjuna, Vasabandhu; Mahayana sutras e.g. Lalitavistara; idea of
bodhisattva, Madhyamika school of Nagarjuna, Yogachara school,
image worship, position & role of women.
Literature- Sanskrit+ regional, centers of learning, composed by;
topics covered 29
Contact with outside world – impact on polity, security,
economy, trade, society, art, culture, literature- new ideas
assimilated because of the contact. Sources-
archaeological- Mohenjodaro has evidences of intercourse
between IVC & Western world;
Literary- Jewish chronicles mention about sea voyage to the
east + articles brought; Jataka stories- reference to trading
voyage to kingdom of Bavaria
Science-
developments in medicine(yunani system from Greeks),
astronomy(usage of Greek names of plants & technical terms),
astrology, concept of horoscopes from Greeks,
art & architecture ( coin making, town planning(John Marshall
mentions Mauryan cities were unplanned Greek cities were
planned which was later on adopted in India);
religion ( image worship).
30
9. Early State and Society in
Eastern India, Deccan and South
India:
Kharavela, The Satavahanas, Tamil States of the Sangam Age;
Administration, Economy, land grants, coinage, trade guilds
and urban centres; Buddhist centres; Sangam literature and
culture; Art and architecture.
Kharavela- highlight his role especially in context of Jainism,
Hathigumpha inscription to elaborate his tenure
Nasik inscription mentions about Gautamiputra satkarni-
Satavahana; other sources- Puranas, Aitreya Brahmana, coins,
Nanaghat inscription
Evidences of trade With south East Asia- literary- Sanskrit & Pali
text, Arthashastra, Jatakas. Archaeological- Indian coins found in
SE Asian countries, Indian artefacts, Etched beads etc.
31
Tamil states- Cheras, Cholas and pandyas-
sangam literature, Buddhist texts and works by historian
Champakalakshmi;
Mudulaikulam inscription- mentions about village assemblies;
Greco Roman sources- mention about city administration;
reference to guilds in Jatakas, Junnar & Nasik inscription;
Sangam text mentions about markets in Puhar & Madurai
Long distance trade- H.P.Ray’s approach- social practice of marine
technology
Society- Tamil texts mention about interaction between North
Sanskritic & Southern Tamil culture e.g. Tolkappiyam mentions
about marriage rituals introduced by Aryans
Champakalakshmi highlighted relation between Sangam society &
megalithic culture
32
10. Guptas, Vakatakas and
Vardhanas:
Polity and administration, Economic conditions, Coinage of
the Guptas, Land grants, Decline of urban centres, Indian
feudalism, Caste system, Position of women, Education and
educational institutions; Nalanda, Vikramshila and Vallabhi,
Literature, scientific literature, art and architecture.
Gupta period as golden age by nationalist historians- why so?
Right or not? ( glorification of period as a reaction to
imperialistic historiography- be balanced & leave answer open
ended); highlighted features- political unification,
exceptionally fine works of Sanskrit Literature, developments
in stone sculpture & architecture; presumption that all this
was based on economic prosperity & social harmony
Feudalism in India views of RS Sharma, DD Koshambi & BD
Chattopadhyaya
Education & educational institutions – cover all aspects-
temples as learning centres, ghatikas, monasteries, individual
tutors for noble class, gurukuls and so on
33
Sources-
inscriptions (royal prashasthi (public message bearing media,
details of royal genealogies, report success not reverses, reflect
prevailing hierarchies & ideals of king), royal land grant
inscriptions(socio economic process, administrative structure,
agrarian relations), donative inscriptions ( social history, source of
patronage)
Coins- public message + media of exchange; Gupta coins
(gold/silver/copper + features); other dynasties
Seals & sealing Bhita & vaishali
Sanskrit literature- Kamandaka’s Nitisara, Smritis- Narada, Vishnu;
epics & Puranas; Tamil texts- Silappadikaram & Manimakalai; works
on medicine, astronomy & technical treasures- Kamasutra &
amarkosha
Traveller’s accounts- Fahien, Hieun Tsang, Itsing
Sculptural & architectural remains
34
Before focusing on land grants focus on land ownership:
Communal/ corporate mentioned in Vishnu Smriti; Royal ownership
as mentioned in Megasthenes Indica, Arthashastra, Dharmasutra,
Private ownership- mentioned by Jaimini
Land grants- who granted? purpose? Sources- donative records,
copper plates.
Royal land grant sources- Mahabharat, Purana & Arthashastra, Pali
canon; Guptas- Bhitari inscription, Bihar stone inscription
By subordinate rulers
Non royal land grants- Damodar copper plate.
Urban Decay –
R.S.Sharma
Literary evidences- contradictions Kamasutra, Silappadikaram,
Manimekalai
Archaeological – Ahhichatra, Varanasi, Patna, existence of monastic
centers- decline of old rise of new centers
Crafts- Indore plates of Pravarsena
Metal work- mentioned in Kamasutra
Artistic remains- Ajanta paintings
Ornamental & Cosmetic works- Amarkosha & Ajanta paintings
35
11. Regional States during
Gupta Era:
The Kadambas, Pallavas, Chalukyas of Badami; Polity and
Administration, Trade guilds, Literature; growth of
Vaishnava and Saiva religions.
Tamil Bhakti movement, Shankaracharya; Vedanta;
Institutions of temple and temple architecture;
Palas, Senas, Rashtrakutas, Paramaras Polity and
administration; Cultural aspects.
Arab conquest of Sind; Alberuni,
The Chalukyas of Kalyana, Cholas, Hoysalas, Pandyas; Polity
and Administration; Local Government; Growth of art and
architecture, religious sects, Institution of temple and
Mathas, Agraharas, education and literature, economy and
society.
36
12. Themes in Early Indian
Cultural History:
Languages and texts, major stages in the evolution of
art and architecture, major philosophical thinkers and
schools, ideas in Science and Mathematics.
Gupta art & regional art
Architecture- religious ( stone temples, brick temples,
Buddhist stupa), cave architecture, human figures,
Sculpture, metal images, terracotta art
Languages & texts- focus on Sanskrit, Prakrit, Tamil
Astronomy & Mathematics- works od Varahmihira,
Aryabhata, Brahmagupta; sulvasutra; ganitashastra
Medical knowledge- Ayurveda, Charaka Samhita, Sushruta
Samhita, veterinary science- hastayurveda of palakapya
37
medieval History
38
13. Early Medieval India,
750-1200:
— Polity: Major political developments in Northern India and the
peninsula, origin and the rise of Rajputs.
For origin of Rajputs there are various theories- indigenous/mixed
race/ Agnikula legend; ties of Rajputs based on blood relations;
causes of their rise & defeat
— The Cholas: administration, village economy and society
“Indian Feudalism”.
Comparison of Indian feudalism to those prevalent in European
societies
— Agrarian economy and urban settlements.
— Trade and commerce.
— Society: the status of the Brahman and the new social order.
— Condition of women.
— Indian science and technology. 39
14. Cultural Traditions in
India, 750-1200:
— Philosophy: Shankaracharya and Vedanta, Ramanuja
and Vishishtadvaita, Madhva and Brahma-Mimansa.
— Religion: Forms and features of religion, Tamil
devotional cult, growth of Bhakti, Islam and its arrival
in India, Sufism.
— Literature: Literature in Sanskrit, growth of Tamil
literature, literature in the newly developing languages,
Kalhan's Rajtarangini, Alberuni's India.
— Art and Architecture: Temple architecture, sculpture,
painting.
40
15. The Thirteenth Century:
41
16. The Fourteenth
Century:
— “The Khalji Revolution”.
— Alauddin Khalji: Conquests and territorial expansion,
agrarian and economic measure.
Works of Ziauddin Barani- Alauddin first to separate state &
religion; Persian historian Wassaf,”he sent an expedition to
Gujarat as a holy war”; Jain sources mention him summoning
Acharya Mahasena; coins
— Muhammad Tughluq: Major projects, agrarian measures,
bureaucracy of Muhammad Tughluq.
Works of Ibn Battuta; coins & token currency(analysed by
Satish Chandra)
— Firuz Tugluq: Agrarian measures, achievements in civil
engineering and public works, decline of the Sultanate,
foreign contacts and Ibn Battuta's account.
Tarikh-i-Firoz Shahi by Ziauddin Barani
42
17. Society, Culture and
Economy in the Thirteenth and
Fourteenth Centuries:
— Society: composition of rural society, ruling classes,
town dwellers, women, religious classes, caste and
slavery under the Sultanate, Bhakti movement, Sufi
movement.
— Culture: Persian literature, literature in the regional
languages of North India, literature in the languages of
South India, Sultanate architecture and new structural
forms, painting, evolution of a composite culture.
— Economy: Agricultural Production, rise of urban
economy and non-agricultural production, trade and
commerce.
Covered all the above topics from IGNOU BA History books
43
18. The Fifteenth and Early
Sixteenth Century-Political
Developments and Economy:
— Rise of Provincial Dynasties : Bengal, Kashmir (Zainul
Abedin), Gujarat.
— Malwa, Bahmanids.
— The Vijayanagara Empire.
— Lodis.
— Mughal Empire, first phase : Babur, Humayun.
— The Sur Empire : Sher Shah’s administration.
— Portuguese colonial enterprise, Bhakti and Sufi
Movements.
Covered all the above topics from IGNOU BA History books
44
19. The Fifteenth and Early
Sixteenth Century- Society and
culture:
— Regional cultures specificities.
— Literary traditions.
— Provincial architectural.
— Society, culture, literature and the arts in
Vijayanagara Empire.
Covered all the above topics from IGNOU BA History books
45
20. Akbar
46
21. Mughal Empire in the
Seventeenth Century:
— Major administrative policies of Jahangir, Shahjahan
and Aurangzeb.
— The Empire and the Zamindars.
— Religious policies of Jahangir, Shahjahan and
Aurangzeb.
— Nature of the Mughal State.
— Late Seventeenth Century crisis and the revolts.
— The Ahom kingdom.
— Shivaji and the early Maratha Kingdom.
Covered all the above topics from IGNOU BA History books
47
22. Economy and society, in the
16th and 17th Centuries:
48
23. Culture during Mughal
Empire:
— Persian histories and other literature.
— Hindi and religious literatures.
— Mughal architecture.
— Mughal painting.
— Provincial architecture and painting.
— Classical music.
— Science and technology.
Covered all the above topics from IGNOU B.A.
49
24. The Eighteenth Century:
50
Irfan Habib- Marxist school,
worked extensively on ancient &
medieval history
Strong stance against Hindu & Islamic communalists
Analysed the Medieval era in detail
As we need to prepare historians views for the exam
and their take on various rulers, reforms introduced by
them, I selectively prepared Irfan Habib’s take on
various rulers alongwith the literary sources.
Its totally upto you which historian you want to prepare.
If we prepare multiple historians we end up mixing the
names and their stance.
51
modern History
52
For this portion try to go through “From
Plassey to Partition and After- A History of
Modern India” by Sekhar Bandyopadhyay.
It covers
• the perspective of historians,
• Analytical part
• Provides the facts & figures for justification
and substantiating our answer
53
1. European Penetration
into India:
The Early European Settlements;
The Portuguese and the Dutch;
The English and the French East India Companies; Their
struggle for supremacy;
Focus on how the English & French East India companies were
different from each other, what were the factors that led to
the victory of French
Carnatic Wars;
Bengal-The conflict between the English and the Nawabs of
Bengal; Siraj and the English; The Battle of Plassey;
Significance of Plassey.
Prepare analysis of Battle of Plassey in detail- how it marked
end of middle age & start of modern age- Jadunath Sarkar
supported this view, try to be balanced while writing answer
as the matter is debatable & no solid conclusion can be
reached.
54
2. British Expansion in India:
Bengal-Mir Jafar and Mir Kasim;
Their role, interests, how they could have changed the course
of history.
The Battle of Buxar;
How it led to the concretization of empire whose foundation
was led by Battle of Plassey, changes after battle of Buxar,
how it helped in conquest of India
Mysore-
role of Hyder Ali & Tipu Sultan, how Tipu Sultan tried to
modernize the state, his international outlook, Anglo-Mysore
wars
The Marathas; The three Anglo-Maratha Wars;
- try to memorize important treaties & battles, personalities
involved
The Punjab –
role of Ranjit singh- his success & failure in establishing a Sikh
empire, causes of fall
55
3. Early Structure of British Raj:
The Early administrative structure;
Comparison of one under Mughals and then gradual changes
brought under British
From diarchy to direct control;
What was the need of it? Its impact on India & on British
The Regulating Act (1773);
The Pitt's India Act (1784);
The Charter Act (1833);
The Voice of free trade and the changing character of
British colonial rule;
Correlate it with the free trade movement gaining momentum
in England and the forces within the country
The English utilitarian and India.
How it was born in India? Ideas of Jeremy Bentham, idea of
rule of law, as a justification for colonialism, steps taken
under it (ban on sati, law codification, ryotwari settlement)
How it lacked human warmth between rulers and those being
ruled.
56
Phases of evolution in Indirect Rule – by Michael
Fisher
1st phase- 1764-97
company’s residents in courts of Awadh, Hyderabad &
Murshidabad after Battle of Buxar(1764)
2nd phase – 1798-1840
Aggressive expansionism
Role of Lord Wellesley + policy of subsidiary alliance
Change of role of Resident
3rd phase- 1841- 57
Idea of consolidation rather than expansion
Direct annexation under Dalhousie
57
4. Economic Impact of
British Colonial Rule:
(a) Land revenue settlements in British India;
The Permanent Settlement- role of Cornwallis; views of
historians- PJ Marshal (focus on how revenue demand was
just 20% higher than what prevailed before 1757) & BB
Chaudhuri (demand doubled b/w 1765 & 1793)- 19% area
Ryotwari Settlement- role of Thomas Munro & Mount
Elphinstone; David Recardo’s Theory of Rent; PUTCUT
settlement; Ravinder Kumar & Sumit Guha’s view how it
led to social upheaval – 52% area
Mahalwari Settlement- R.M.Bird – 29% area
Economic impact of the revenue arrangements;
Commercialization of agriculture; Rise of landless
agrarian laborers; Impoverishment of the rural society.
58
(b) Dislocation of traditional trade and commerce;
De-industrialization- industrial population of Bihar region
declined from 18.6% in 1809-13 to 8.5% in 1901
Decline of traditional crafts- fall in number of weavers &
spinners Bihar region declined from 62.3% in 1809-13 to 15.1%
in 1901
Drain of wealth; (prepare 1-2 facts given by Dadabhai Naoroji
or R.C.Dutt for value addition in answer to quote the quantum
of drain)
Economic transformation of India; Railroad and
communication network including telegraph and postal
services;
Famine and poverty in the rural interior;
Famine policies and attempts done by the British government
should also be quotes, be balanced in approaching the
question
European business enterprise and its limitations.
A subpart of the question will be Indian business enterprises,
why they were successful
59
5. Social and Cultural
Developments:
The state of indigenous education, its dislocation;
Orientalist-Anglicist controversy,
How it started with William Hastings, role of Max Muller,
Macaulay, HH Wilson;
Analysis- idea of enlightenment, patriarchal notions of British,
perspective of liberty, reverse acculturation administrative
efficiency
The introduction of western education in India;
The rise of press, literature and public opinion;
Prepare with examples and analysis
The rise of modern vernacular literature;
Progress of Science;
Christian missionary activities in India.
60
6. Social and Religious Reform
Movements in Bengal and Other
Areas:
Ram Mohan Roy, The Brahmo Movement;
Devendranath Tagore;
Iswarchandra Vidyasagar;
The Young Bengal Movement;
Dayanada Saraswati;
The social reform movements in India including Sati,
widow remarriage, child marriage etc.;
The contribution of Indian renaissance to the growth of
modern India;
Islamic revivalism-the Feraizi and Wahabi Movements.
61
7. Indian Response to British
Rule:
Peasant movement and tribal uprisings in the 18th and 19th
centuries including
the Rangpur Dhing (1783),
the Kol Rebellion (1832),
the Mopla Rebellion in Malabar (1841-1920),
the Santal Hul (1855),
Indigo Rebellion (1859-60),
Deccan Uprising (1875)
the Munda Ulgulan (1899-1900);
The Great Revolt of 1857 —Origin, character, causes of
failure, the consequences;
The shift in the character of peasant uprisings in the post-
1857 period;
The peasant movements of the 1920s and 1930s.
62
8. Factors leading to the
birth of Indian Nationalism
Politics of Association;
The Foundation of the Indian National Congress; The
Safety-valve thesis relating to the birth of the Congress;
Programme and objectives of Early Congress;
the social composition of early Congress leadership;
the Moderates and Extremists;
The Partition of Bengal (1905);
The Swadeshi Movement in Bengal; the economic and
political aspects of Swadeshi Movement;
The beginning of revolutionary extremism in India.
63
9. Rise of Gandhi
64
Nationalism and the Peasant Movements;
Nationalism and Working class movements;
Women and Indian youth and students in Indian politics
(1885-1947);
the election of 1937 and the formation of ministries;
Cripps Mission;
the Quit India Movement;
the Wavell Plan;
The Cabinet Mission.
65
10. Constitutional Developments
in the Colonial India between
1858 and 1935.
Direct questions are asked from this portion but try to
focus on the analysis portion
The international circumstances and scenario when the
changes were introduced
what was outcome of the developments
How different sections reacted to the developments
What was the course of action taken by the leaders
66
11. Other strands in the
National Movement.
The Revolutionaries: Bengal, the Punjab, Maharashtra,
U.P., the Madras Presidency, Outside India.
The Left;
The Left within the Congress: Jawaharlal Nehru, Subhas
Chandra Bose, the Congress Socialist Party;
the Communist Party of India,
other left parties.
67
12. Politics of Separatism
68
13. Consolidation as a Nation
69
14. Caste and Ethnicity after 1947;
Backward Castes and Tribes in post-
colonial electoral politics;
Dalit movements.
• Prepare examples of Dalit assertion – Dalit Panthers, rise
of Bahujan Samaj Party etc; try to memorize one
movement that was successful in achieving its goals and
other one that failed, and its analysis
• Tribes – continuity in their condition from the colonial
era and the changes that have been introduced
• Caste & ethnicity- how they have been remolded in new
shape, changes & continuity, reflection in day to day
life, steps taken by society, better to prepare 1-2 social
activist, role played by legislation, forces of
globalization, education
70
15. Economic development and
political change; Land reforms;
the politics of planning and rural
reconstruction; Ecology and
environmental policy in post-
colonial India; Progress of
Science.
• It will be easier if we prepare this portion in
timeline frame how the changes have occurred and
the impact it has left along with some examples-
either in form of legislation, social activists,
individual initiatives or community initiatives
• For progress in science try to cover all dimensions-
IT, communication, space technology, medicine,
71
research & development- examples can be quoted
from GS paper 3
Other analytical questions
asked in Previous years:
The growth of territorial empire in India was neither planned
no directed from Britain
You can quote historians view- P.J.Marshall, Lord Seely and
Bernard Porter supported this view, while counter view is based
on historical evidences- armed trade, dependency between king
& EIC etc.
Imperial idea of British has a philosophical as well as
functional basis
English utilitarianism’s impact on agrarian policy; Indian
society
So, Best source of preparation and evaluating one is to go
through past year question papers
72
world History
73
16. Enlightenment and
Modern ideas:
(i) Major Ideas of Enlightenment : Kant, Rousseau.
Start with what were the roots of enlightenment (how
scientific revolution contributed to it, role of exploration,
rise of imperialism, fall in influence of church, antiwar
sentiments); the major strands- romanticism, skepticism; also
cover Montesquieu & Voltaire
Major ideas- innovation in philosophy, literature,
mathematics, science, economics(rise of mercantilism,
laissez-faire), changes in law & its codification, challenging
the aristocratic privileges & religious affiliations
How it led to Industrial revolution
Women’s rights
Rise in humanitarianism
Music 74
(ii) Spread of Enlightenment in the colonies.
Start from the English enlightenment then how it influenced
the Scottish enlightenment; how it came to the forefront in
France, Germany & Italy; how German enlightenment was
different from others
Spread in colonies- America- how it led to religious tolerance,
rise of republicanism, indirectly led to American war of
independence, focus on life, liberty & pursuit of happiness
Role in Meiji restoration in Japan
(iii) Rise of socialist ideas (up to Marx); spread of Marxian
Socialism.
Role of Plato, Rousseau, Francois Babeuf(father of Socialism)
Concept of Utopian socialism
Hegel versus Marx
Spread of Marxian socialism- 1st International (International
workingmen’s association) in Britain, Paris Commune 1871, 2nd
international 1889, 3rd international (Comintern) in 1919
Impact in Britain, France, Germany, Russia and US
75
17. Origins of Modern
Politics :
(i) European States System. (covered in new NCERT in
detail)
Transition from medieval to modern nation state system
Treaty of Westphalia & end of thirty year war
Rise of nationalism
Role of renaissance , reformation & enlightenment; fall of
Roman Church
Rise of city states in Italy;
Variation of concept of state across the nations-
similarities & differences
76
(ii) American Revolution and the Constitution.
Why Britain was able to colonise- economic, technological,
military + biological factors
Background of revolution- political structure of colonies,
Treaty of Paris 1763
Laws & policies leading to War- slave trade monopoly,
Navigation laws of 1660, stamp act, Quartering act 1765,
Townshend Act 1767; Intolerable acts
Other factors- independent way of thinking, trade,
geographic location, enlightenment, colonial legislations
impact
Jefferson’s declaration of independence
Reasons of American success- technological & geographical
factors; Britain fighting on two fronts; support by France &
Spain
Results of revolution? Impact on US, Britain & France; how
it indirectly fueled French revolution; interpretations by
historians (covered in glory, determinists (all about
economics), Neo whigs (conservative approach), debate
today ( radical & ideological)).
American constitution- the process; formation of articles
of confederation- its weaknesses, great compromnise of
1787, Massachussets compromise & bill of rights
77
(iii) French Revolution and Aftermath, 1789-1815.
Why revolution happened only in France not other nations?
Internal factors – Estates General of 1781, political-socio-
economic
External factors role of American revolution
Role of enlightenment
Series of events- (importance of establishment of National
Assembly 1789), Declaration of Rights of Man & citizen;
food crisis; assembly’s weaknesses
Positive changes & negative impact
Establishment of republic – constitution of 1791-; jacobins
vs girodians, role of sansculottes.
Reign of terror & Thermidorian reaction; Jacobin
constitution
Role of directory; coup and rise of Napolean
Impact of French revolution
78
iv) American Civil War with reference to Abraham
Lincoln and the abolition of slavery.
North versus south divide
Series of events- 3/5 compromise, sectionalism,
protectionism, slave power & free soil movement.
Emancipation proclamation by Abraham Lincoln- its
political & international impact, limitations; its
importance
What were positive impacts of war
The limitations of war- women rights, political rights to
blacks, corruption, misgovernment, violence against
Southern Whites, right to vote or hold office taken from
Southern Whites
79
(v) British Democratic politics, 1815-1850 : Parliamentary
Reformers, Free Traders, Chartists
Unreformed house of commons, why there were demands for
reforms (including demand for women suffrage + removal of
corruption), stages of reforms plus impact of each reform bill
(do it in broad manner don’t go in depth); assessment of
reforms
Free traders v/s Protectionism debate; role of vested interest
groups; impact on India & other colonies of rise in free trade;
role of Board of trade; impact on international relations of
Britain; debate over British Laissez Faire
Who were Chartist? 6 reforms to make political system more
democratic, background, People’s charter act of 1838, Chartist
riot, Newport rising; causes of failure of Chartist; impact on
Church and legacy of chartist. 6 reforms demanded were:
vote for every man 21 years of age
Secret ballot
Payment of members on basis of honesty + service to constituency
Equal constituencies
No property qualification to be member of Parliament
80
Annual Parliament elections
18. Industrialization :
(i) English Industrial Revolution : Causes and Impact on
Society.
Why IR in England?, role of mercantilism, causes of rise,
characteristics, technological developments during IR +
reform movements as a spill over impact
(ii) Industrialization in other countries : USA, Germany,
Russia, Japan.
Better to create comparison tables, how it varied in all
four nations; advantages that Germany had during the
industrialization process; Why IR happened in Japan and
not China?
(iii) Industrialization and Globalization.
81
19. Nation-State System :
(i) Rise of Nationalism in 19th century.
Factors and changed scenario from 18th to 19th century
(ii) Nationalism : State-building in Germany and Italy.
Germany – role of Napolean, formation of Zolleverein,
revolution of 1830, how Prussia was natural leader; phases
of integration, battle of Sadowa, Franco- Prussian war; 3
forces of integration- Moltka, Roon & Wilhelm, Bismarck;
effects of unification on Prussia, Austria, Italy & France
Italian unification (Risorgimento)- role of Cavour,(mind)
Mazzini(heart), Garibaldi(sword); role of Austria; early
attempts at unification; how Piedmont came to the
forefront; solving of Roman question
How unification of both differed from each other
(iii) Disintegration of Empires in the face of the
emergence of nationalities across the World.
82
20. Imperialism and
Colonialism :
(i) South and South-East Asia.
(ii) Latin America and South Africa.
(iii) Australia.
(iv) Imperialism and free trade: Rise of neo-imperialism.
Focus on the pull & push factors. There is a pattern for Asia
other pattern for America and South Africa while Australia was
colonized as a penal colony. Be thorough with the process and
the nations involved.
Remember that Thailand was only country in South East Asia
that was never colonized
Marxist Views about Imperialism, colonialism v/s imperialism,
impacts
What is neo imperialism? Role of European powers, US< Japan,
83
rise of social Darwinism, what led to rise of neo imperialism
21. Revolution and Counter-
Revolution :
(i) 19th Century European revolutions.
1830 revolution, 1848 revolution and their impact
(ii) The Russian Revolution of 1917-1921.
Focus on two coups- February revolution & October
revolution(was it a coup or mass resurrection?)
Causes- socio-economic factors, factors related to WW1,
political issues, influence of Western ideas, Czar’s policy of
Russification
Bolsheviks v/s Mensheviks; role of social revolutionaries ;
provisional govt. v/s Petrograd soviet; Role of Lenin &
Bolsheviks, problems they faced & how they solved)
Civil war & its effects (tragedy for Russians, War communism,
Political developments), New economic policy of Lenin 1921;
Scissor crisis; Lenin- an evil genius?; Lenin v/s Stalin
84
(iii) Fascist Counter-Revolution, Italy and Germany.
Weimar republic & its failure- causes? Rise of Nazism; factors
leading to rise of Hitler; National Socialism; interpretations
by Historians; Nazi ideologies ( Lebensraum, Fuhrer, Social
Darwinism); consolidation of power by Hitler; how Hitler was
able to stay in power?; Nazi as totalitarian state; Nuremberg
Laws; structure of control in Nazi state; position of women;
Role of Hitler in WW2, Spanish Civil War
Fascism v/s Nazism
What is Fascism? How it can be correlated to Communism?
Why Mussolini was able to come to power? Difference in role
of monarch in Italy & Germany? Difference in anti-Semitic
feeling in both the countries?
Role of opposition and way of tackling
Leaders :
Italy- Mussolini
Germany- Hitler
Spain- Franco
Portugal- Salazar
85
(iv) The Chinese Revolution of 1949.
Background- the warlord era, opium wars, Hundred days
reform, Boxer rebellion, revolution of 1911, Japan’s 21
demands of 1915
Role of KMT(Kuomintang), Dr. Sun Yat-Sen, Chiang Kai-Shek
Founding of Chinese Communist Party
KMT v/s Chinese Communist party
Role of Mao- his policies, factors leading to his popular
support, difference in policies during World War 2
Role of US and support to KMT
Formation of Taiwan and policies of Mao post Formation of
republic- its impact
Role of China in power camps and spread of communism
Difference in ideologies of Lenin/Stalin and Mao
86
22. World Wars :
87
23. The World after World
War II:
(i) Emergence of Two power blocs.
(ii) Emergence of Third World and non-alignment.
(iii) UNO and the global disputes.
The topics we have to cover in international relations as
well, better to prepare some examples where UN
intervention proved to be successful and where it failed
Non alignment also needs to be prepared similarly – its
success, failure, role of India, significance today
88
24 . Liberation from
Colonial Rule :
(i) Latin America-Bolivar.
(ii) Arab World-Egypt.
(iii) Africa-Apartheid to Democracy.
(iv) South-East Asia-Vietnam.
Try to remember the leaders/parties name and which
power US/USSR was supporting which party
Sequence of events
How the situation was manipulated due to economic and
military assistance by the two camps
Role of international institutions like UN, NAM in the
liberation struggle
89
25. Decolonization and
Underdevelopment :
(i) Factors constraining Development ; Latin America,
Africa.
Try to be multidimensional in approach covering all
aspects- ethnicity, historical suppressions, prevalence of
tribalism, economic & technological backwardness, neo
imperialism, role of international and national leaders,
local dynamics
90
26. Unification of Europe :
91
27. Disintegration of Soviet
Union and the Rise of the
Unipolar World :
(i) Factors leading to the collapse of Soviet Communism
and Soviet Union, 1985-1991.
(ii) Political Changes in East Europe 1989-2001.
(iii) End of the Cold War and US Ascendancy in the World
as the lone superpower.
Generally we get direct questions from this portion, be
thorough with theory and try to understand the linkages of
national & international happenings and how they impact
each other
92
We all know from where to
start but what we forget during
preparation is “where to stop”.
If we go on behind one
topic/subject other topics are
bound to be neglected. Be
balanced in approach and
know “WHERE TO STOP” 93
Thank you
&
All The
Best
94