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Tamilnadu Samacheer Kalvi 9th Social Science History Solutions Chapter 7 State and Society in Medieval India
State and Society in Medieval India Textual Exercise
I. Choose the correct answer.
Question 1.
……………… was the second stronghold of Ala-ud-din Khalji’s expanding Kingdom.
(a) Dauladabad
(b) Delhi
(c) Madurai
(d) Bidar
Answer:
(a) Dauladabad
Question 2.
The Deccan Sultanates were conquered by ………………
(a) Ala-ud-din Khilji
(b) Ala-ud-din Bahman- shah
(c) Aurangzeb
(d) Malik Kaffir
Answer:
(c) Aurangzeb
Question 3.
The establishment of ……………… empire changed the administrative and institutional structures of South India.
(a) Bahmani
(b) Vijayanagar
(c) Mughal
(d) Nayak
Answer:
(b) Vijayanagar
Question 4.
Krishnadeva Raya was a contemporary of …………………
(a) Babur
(b) Humayun
(c) Akbar
(d) Aihole
Answer:
(d) Aihole
II. Find out the correct statement.
Question 1.
(i) The establishment of the Vijayanagar Kingdom witnessed the most momentous . development in the history of South India.
(ii) The Saluva dynasty ruled for a longer period.
(iii) The rulers of Vijayanagara had smooth relations with the Bahmani Sultanate.
(iv) Rajput kingdoms attracted migrants from Persia and Arabia.
Answer:
(i) and (iv) are correct
Question 2.
(i) The Nayak Kingdom came up in Senji.
(ii) The appointment of Telugu Nayaks resulted in the migration of Telugu-speaking people from Madurai.
(iii) Mughal Empire started declining from the time of Jahangir.
(iv) The Europeans came to India in search of slaves.
Answer:
(i) and (ii) are correct
Question 3.
(i) Mythical geneologies were collected by Col. Mackenzie.
(ii) Indigo was the most important beverage crop in India.
(iii) Mahmud Gawan was the minister in Alauddin Khalji’s kingdom.
(iv) The Portuguese built their first fort in Goa.
Answer:
(i) is correct
Question 4.
Assertion (A): India was an integral part of maritime trade, extending from China in the east to Africa in the west.
Reason (R): Geographical location of India in the middle of Indian Ocean.
(a) (i) A is correct; R explains about A
(b) (ii) A is wrong; R is correct
(c) (iii) A and R are wrong
(d) (iv) A is correct; R does not explains about A.
Answer:
(a) (i) A is correct; R explains about A
Question 5.
(i) Gold images of great beauty and artistry were made by Cholas.
(ii) The best example for Chola architecture is Siva asNataraja performing the cosmic dance.
(a) (i) is correct (ii) is wrong
(b) Both (i) and (ii) is correct
(c) Both (i) and (ii) are wrong
(d) (i) is wrong, (ii) is correct.
Answer:
(d) (i) is wrong, (ii) is correct.
III. Match the following:
Answer:
1. (d)
2. (c)
3. (a)
4. (e)
5. (b)
IV. Fill in the blanks.
- ………………. were Europeans who arrived on the west coast of India.
- The combined forces of the five Deccan Sultanates defeated the Vijayanagar army in 1565 A.D. (C.E.) at the battle of ……………
- Vijayanagara evolved as a ………………
- The tempo of urbanization increased during ……………… period.
- ……………… was the enterprising period in the history of Tamil Nadu.
Answers:
- Portuguese
- Talikota
- Militaristic State
- Vijayanagar
- The Chola period
V. Answer all questions given under each heading.
Question 1.
The arrival of the Europeans
(a) Who controlled the spice trade from India?
Answer:
Muslims controlled the Spice trade from India.
(b) What enabled the Portuguese to have control over maritime trade over the entire region?
Answer:
The Naval superiority enabled the Portuguese to have control over the Maritime trade over the entire region.
(c) How were the trading activities of the Europeans carried on in India?
Answer:
The trading activities of the Europeans carried on through the respective East India Companies in India. ‘
(d) Mention the enclaves of the Dutch, the English, the French, and the Danes in India.
Answer:
- The Dutch were in Pulicat (and later Nagapatnam)
- The English in Madras
- The French in Pondicherry and
- The Danes in Tarangampadi (Tranquebar).
Question 2.
Society, Religion and Culture.
(а) Which is the most distinctive aspect of Indian Society?
Answer:
Caste is the most distinctive aspect of Indian Society.
(b) What is a guild?
Answer:
The occupational caste groups are referred to as guilds.
(c) Mention some Saivite movements.
Answer:
Saiva Siddhanta in TamilNadu
Virasaivas in Karnataka
Varkarisampradaya in Maharashtra.
(d) Name the court musician of Akbar.
Answer:
Tansen was the court musician of Akbar.
VI. Answer the following briefly.
Question 1.
Write about the military expeditions of Malik Kafur.
Answer:
- Malik Kafur was the commander of Alauddin’s forces.
- He defeated the Mongols in 1306.
- He led a series of expeditions in the southern part of India against the Yadavas (1308), Kakatiyas (1310), the Hoysalas (1311), and the Pandyas (1311).
- During these campaigns, he obtained a large number of treasures elephants and horses for the Delhi sultanate.
Question 2.
Who founded the Vijayanagar Kingdom? Mention the dynasties that ruled over the kingdom.
Answer:
Harihara and Bukka, two brothers founded the Vijayanagar Kingdom.
Sangama Dynasty, Saluva Dynasty and Tuluva Dynasties ruled over the Kingdom.
Question 3.
Mention the two natural advantages that India had in cotton weaving.
Answer:
- India had two natural advantages in cotton weaving.
- The first was that cotton grew in almost all parts of India so that the basic raw material was easily available.
- Second, the technology of producing a permanent colour on cotton using vegetable dyes was known from very early times in India.
Question 4.
What were the factors which facilitated urbanization?
Answer:
- It has been observed that cities and towns fulfilled diverse and overlapping roles in the economy.
- The large cities were centres of manufacturing and marketing, banking and financial services.
- They were usually located at the intersection of an extensive network of roads which connected them to other parts of the country.
- Smaller towns were marketing centres in local trade connecting the immediate rural hinterland.
- Cities also served as political and administrative centres, both in the capital region (for instance, Agra and Delhi) and in the provinces.
Question 5.
What is sericulture?
Answer:
- Sericulture means silk production by breeding the mulberry silkworm.
- It was introduced in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries.
- By the seventeenth century, Bengal had become one of the largest silk-producing regions in the world.
VII. Answer the following in detail.
Question 1.
Discuss the political changes during 1526-1707 A.D. (C.E.).
Answer:
(i) The Mughal empire was founded by Babur in 1526 A.D. (C.E.) after he defeated Ibrahim Lodi at Panipat.
(ii) The first six Mughal emperors are referred to as the ‘Great Mughals’. Aurangzeb was the last of the great Mughals.
(iii) Akbar consolidated the Mughal empire through conquests and through a policy of conciliation with the Religious based kingdoms of Rajasthan.
(iv) The Mughal empire began to disintegrate after Aurangzeb, continued to exist nominally till 1857 A.D. (C.E.) when the British finally ended the virtually non-existent empire.
(v) A new power centre rose in Maharashtra in the seventeenth century, and the Marathas
under the leadership of Shivaji seriously undermined the authority of the Mughals in western India.
(vi) At its height, the empire stretched over most of the Indian sub-continent.
(vii) Only the south-western region of Kerala and southern Tamilnadu were not directly under the Mughal rule.
Question 2.
Explain the commercial developments in Medieval India.
Answer:
- India had an extensive network of trade for marketing the goods.
- All these kinds of markets co-existed in India on an “ascending scale in the overlapping circuits of exchange”.
- Big cities were usually major commercial centres, with bazaars and shops.
- Small ships and boats were used in coastal trade along the western and eastern coasts of the country.
- Maritime trade across the Indian Ocean, extending from China in the east, to Africa in the west, had flourished for many centuries.
- Ports like Malacca, Calicut, etc. were ‘entrepots’.
- In the seventeenth century, Surat in Gujarat, Masulipatnam in the Golkonda kingdom, Chittagong in Bengal, Pulicat, and Nagapatnam on the Coromandel Coast, and Calicut in Kerala were all major ports in Asiatic trade.
- India exported textiles, pepper, precious and semi-precious stones. its iron and steel were in great demand in the entires Asian regional.
- It imported from China silk, ceramics, gold, spices, aromatic woods and camphor, silk, Drugs, dye, woods and sugar were imported from Persia.
- Bankers and money changers operated in all the big cities, and bills of exchange or hundis were used to transfer money from one city to another
- The European trading companies entered into contracts with the local merchants to carry on their trading activities.
- But this scenario changed in the eighteenth century. The Indian merchants were under contract to the Europeans to supply textiles and other goods.
Question 3.
“Chola Period was an enterprising period in the history of Tamil Nadu” – Elucidate.
Answer:
(i) The CHOLA PERIOD was an enterprising period when trade and the economy expanded, accompanied by urbanization.
(ii) The administrative machinery was re-organized during the Chola rule.
(iii) The basic unit of local administration was the village (ur), followed by the sub-region (Nadu) and district (kottam). Tax-free villages granted to Brahmins were known as brahmadeya. Marketing centres and towns were known as nagara.
(iv) The ur, nadu, brahmadeya and nagaram each had its own assembly.
(v) They were responsible for the maintenance and management of the water resources and land; the local temples; resolving local issues and disputes; and collecting the taxes due to the government.
(vi) While the Chola state did not intervene in this fundamental system of local administration, they introduced innovations in revenue administration by creating new revenue divisions (mandalam and valanadu). Several new taxes on agriculture and commerce were also introduced.
(vii) The second notable feature was the great increase in the construction of temples. This had two dimensions: new temples were constructed, and existing temples became multi-functional social and economic institutions.
(viii) The construction of great temples also was a reflection of the growing prosperity in the kingdom, since the activity involved great expenditure.
Student Activities
Question 1.
On the outline map of India mark the important places of medieval India.
Answer:
Question 2.
Collect pictures of the architectural importance of the Cholas.
Answer:
You can collect the pictures of the architectural importance of the Cholas and paste them into the Album.
IX Assignment
Question 1.
Collect the pictures of Angkor Wat in Cambodia.
Answer:
You can collect pictures of Angkor Wat in Cambodia. You can do this as Home Assignment.
Question 2.
Arrange a debate in the class on the advantages and disadvantages of urbanization.
Answer:
The teacher can arrange a debate on the advantages and disadvantages of Urbanization.
State and Society in Medieval India Additional Questions
I. Choose the correct answer.
Question 1.
Muslim rule was established in Delhi at the end of the 12th century by …………..
(a) Muhammad Ghori
(b) Alauddin Khalji
(c) Mahmud Gawan
(d) Aurangazeb
Answer:
(a) Muhammad Ghori
Question 2.
……………… was sent on military expeditions further south in the first decade of the 1300 AD.
(a) Muhammad-bin-Tughlaq
(b) Alauddin Bahman Shah
(c) Malik Kafur
(d) None of the above
Answer:
(c) Malik Kafur
Question 3.
Maritime trade with South East Asia and China expanded greatly during the ………….. period.
(a) Chera
(b) Chola
(c) Pandya
(d) Pallava
Answer:
(b) Chola
Question 4.
The last of the great Mughal was …………….
(a) Humayun
(b) Akbar
(c) Jahangir
(d) Aurangazeb
Answer:
(d) Aurangazeb
Question 5.
…………… period was an enterprising period.
(a) The Chola
(b) The Chera
(c) The Pandya
(d) The Pallava
Answer:
(a) The Chola
Question 6.
The most distinctive aspect of Indian society is ……………….
(a) Religion
(b) Caste
(c) Culture
(d) None of the above
Answer:
(b) Caste
Question 7.
…………….. is a pilgrimage centre.
(a) Mumbai
(b) Calcutta
(c) Varanasi
(d) Delhi
Answer:
(c) Varanasi
Question 8.
………….. was introduced in the 14th century.
(a) Sericulture
(b) Horticulture
(c) Agriculture
(d) None of the above
Answer:
(a) Sericulture
II. Find out the correct statement.
Question 1.
(i) The Mughal era from the 15th to 18th century is referred to as the early modem period.
(ii) Muslim rule was established in Delhi at the end of the 12th century.
(iii) Arab Muslims had been trading in the ports of the west coast.
(iv) The impact of Muslim rule was felt during the reign of Malik Kafur.
Answer:
(ii) and (iii) are correct
Question 2.
(i) The Europeans were pre-occupied with trying a find a direct sea route to India.
(ii) The spice trade from India was controlled by Muslims.
(iii) The second notable feature was the great increase in the construction of temples.
(iv) The Chola period was an enterprising period.
Answer:
(iii) and (iv) are correct
Question 3.
(i) Textiles accounted for nearly 90% of the total exports from India.
(ii) Ainnurruvar had its headquarters in Aihole.
(iii) Coromandel merchants operated from the Persian Gulf and Red sea.
(iv) The Indian merchants were under contract to the Europeans.
Answer:
(ii) is correct
Question 4.
Assertion (A): Sikhism was founded by Guru Nanak.
Reason (R): He lived during 15th and 16th centuries.
(a) A is correct R explains about A
(b) A is the wrong R is correct
(c) A and R are wrong
(d) A is correct R does not explain about A
Answer:
(d) A is correct R does not explain about A
Question 5.
(i) India was predominantly an agricultural country.
(ii) A very large population lived in Rural areas and depends on agriculture.
(a) (i) is correct (ii) is wrong
(b) Both (i) and (ii) are correct
(c) Both (i) and (ii) are wrong
(d) (i) is wrong (ii) is correct
Answer:
(b) Both (i) and (ii) are correct
III. Match the following:
Answer:
1. (g)
2. (e)
3. (a)
4. (b)
5. (f)
6. (c)
7. (d)
IV. Fill in the blanks.
- The Mughal era from the 16th to 18th century is referred to as the …………….
- The impact of Muslim rule was felt during the reign of ……………
- Maritime trade with South-east Asia and China expanded greatly during the …………….
- The last known Chola emperor was ………………
- The Mughal empire was founded by ……………. in 1526 A.D.
- In 1498 A.D Vasco da Gama landed on the …………… coast.
- The …………….. empire transformed the economy and society of North India.
- ……………. took roots when the Portuguese arrived in Kerala and set themselves up in Goa.
- In ……………. India especially the Tamil region urbanization went hand in hand with temples.
- …………… had become one of the largest silk-producing regions in the world.
Answers:
- early modem period
- Alauddin Khalji
- Chola period
- Rajendra
- Babur
- Kerala
- Mughal
- Christianity
- South
- Bengal
V. Answer all questions given under each heading.
Question 1.
The Advent of Islam.
(a) When was Muslim rule established in Delhi? By whom?
Answer:
Muslim rule was established in Delhi at the end of the 12th century by Muhammad Ghori.
(b) Who was trading in the ports of the west coast?
Answer:
Arab Muslim merchants had been trading in the ports of the west coast especially Kerala.
(c) When was the impact of Muslim rule felt?
Answer:
The impact of Muslim rule was felt during the reign of Alauddin Khalji.
(d) What was his primary objective?
Answer:
His primary objective was to plunder the wealth, rather than to expand his territory.
Question 2.
The Chola empire in the south.
(a) Who began the territorial expansion?
Answer:
The territorial expansion of the Chola empire began under Rajaraj a I.
(b) What do you know about Rajendra I?
Answer:
The Chola empire expanded further under Rajendra I.
He had successfully taken his armies as far to the northeast up to the river Ganges.
(c) In whose period Maritime trade expanded?
Answer:
Maritime trade expanded with South-east Asia and China greatly during the Chola period.
(d) Against whom did the Naval expeditions sent?
Answer:
The Naval expeditions had been sent against the Sailendra Kingdom of Sri Vijaya, Kadarand, and Ceylon.
(e) What did he earn from this war?
Answer:
This war earned him the title of “the Chola who had conquered the Ganga and Kadaram”.
Question 3.
Urbanization in South India.
(a) Comment on South Indian temples.
Answer:
In South India especially the Tamil region urbanization went hand in hand with temples.
(b) How were the temples?
Answer:
Temples were large economic enterprises requiring a variety of goods and services to function.
(c) In whose period did the pace of urbanization increase?
Answer:
The pace of urbanization increased during the Vijayanagar period.
(d) How were the Urban centres?
Answer:
Most Urban centres displayed rural characteristics.
For instance, it was not uncommon to find fields with crops within the city.
VI. Answer the following briefly.
Question 1.
How did the historian ‘Burton Stein describe the different periods of Indian History?
Answer:
The historian Burton Stein, uses the term ‘classical’ to describe the period up to the Gupta empire and dates the ‘medieval’ period from the 7th century A.D.(CE) till the beginning of Mughal rule in the 16th century. The Mughal era, from the 16th to 18th century is referred to as the early modem period.
Question 2.
Who brought out the isolated southern parts into the orbit of the rulers of the North?
Answer:
The Tughlaq kings who came after Alauddin also sent their armies to the south. As a result, the generally more isolated southern part of the country came into the orbit of the rulers of the north. Governors were appointed in various provinces in the Deccan region, and a Sultanate was even established in Madurai.
Question 3.
Mention the five Sultanates who came up in Deccan in the 15th century.
Answer:
By the end of the fifteenth century, five sultanates came up in the Deccan: Bijapur, Golkonda, Ahftiednagar, Berar and Bidar. Bijapur and Golkonda were the largest of these sultanates and the region entered a phase of considerable economic growth and expansion of trade.
Question 4.
How did the Vijayanagar empire wither away?
Answer:
- The rulers of Vijayanagar were almost continuously at war with the Bahmani sultanate as well as with the religion-based kingdoms of Kondavidu and Orissa.
- Finally, the combined forces of the five Deccani Sultanates defeated Vijayanagar in 1565 A.D. (C.E.) at the Battle of Talikota.
- The Vijayanagar emperors then shifted their capital further south to Penugonda, and eventually to Chandragiri near Tirupati.
- The empire (or what remained of it) finally withered away in the middle of the seventeenth century.
Question 5.
What was the impact of Islamic rule on Indian society?
Answer:
The establishment of Islamic Rule in Delhi made a big impact on Indian society. Initially, Islam did not cause any social tension. Arab merchants, for instance, when they came and settled on the Kerala coast, married local women and led a peaceful life. The situation changed when Islam became a state power. For a medieval ruler one way of asserting imperial authority was to demolish the place of worship of the enemies. Otherwise, Islam as a monotheistic religion had a positive impact on Indian society. It played a decisive role in the evolution of a composite culture.
Question 6.
Why did the Europeans come to India?
Answer:
The Europeans came to India primarily in search of spices. But soon there was an explosion in the demand for Indian textiles in the European markets, often referred to as the ‘Indian craze’. This led to a significant expansion of textile production in India, which was accompanied by an expansion of the production of commercial crops like cotton and indigo, and other dyes.
Question 7.
Give an account of genealogies collected by Colin Mackenzie.
Answer:
(i) Caste groups often petitioned the local ruler for permission to use various symbols of higher status, like the right to wear footwear, the right to carry umbrellas, the right to use certain decorations at funerals, and so on.
(ii) Each caste also created a mythical genealogy to establish its origins; this was used to justify the claim for the right to a higher status in the hierarchy.
(iii) These genealogies are found in many of the manuscripts collected by Colin Mackenzie.
Question 8.
Write a short note on the literary works of the Chola period.
Answer:
- The Chola period was an era of remarkable cultural activity. These were the centuries when major literary works were written.
- The best known classical poet, Kamban, wrote Ramayana in Tamil which was formally
presented (Arangetram) in the temple at Srirangam. Sekkilar’s Periyapuranam similarly was presented at the temple in Chidambaram. - Among the other great works of the period are Kalingattup-parani and Muvarula.
- It was also a period when great religio-philosophical treatises like the Sankara-bhashyam and Sri-bhashyam were produced.
Question 9.
Explain the Art and Architecture of the Mughal period.
Answer:
The Mughals were well-known for their aesthetic values and were great patrons of the arts. They left behind numerous monuments, in addition to constructing entire cities like Shahjahanabad (Delhi) and Fatehpur Sikri, gardens, mosques and forts. Decorative arts – especially jewellery set with precious and semi-precious gems for items of personal use – flourished under the patronage of the royal household and urban elites. The art of painting also flourished in the Mughal period. Primarily known as Mughal miniatures, they were generally intended as book illustrations or were single works to be kept in albums.
Question 10.
What happened in the business scenario in the beginning of the 18th century in India?
Answer:
- The Indian merchants benefitted from the business opportunities offered by the European companies. .
- But this scenario began to change from the beginning of the eighteenth century.
- The Indian merchants were under contract to the Europeans to supply textiles and other goods.
- But by then the local resources were not enough to produce the quantities required and political disturbances also disrupted all economic activity.
- This resulted in most merchants being bankrupted diminishing the economic vitality of the merchant community.
VII. Answer the following in detail.
Question 1.
Describe the major political changes.
Answer:
(i) The expansion of the Chola empire from the time of Rajaraja which eclipsed the Pandyan and Pallava kingdoms, extending north till Orissa.
(ii) From the twelfth century, the beginning of several centuries of Muslim rule in Delhi, extending throughout North India and the spread of Islam to different parts of the country.
(iii) By the end of the 13th century the eclipse of the great empire of the Cholas and the consequent rise of many religious kingdoms in South India. This ultimately culminated in the rise of the Vijayanagar empire which exercised authority over all of South India and came to be considered the bastion of religious rule in the south.
(iv) The consolidation of Muslim rule under the Mughals in the north, beginning in 1526 A.D. (C.E.) with the defeat of the Ibrahim Lodi by Babur. At its height, the Mughal empire stretched from Kabul to Gujarat to Bengal, from Kashmir to South India.
(v) The coming of the Europeans, beginning with the Portuguese who arrived on the west coast of India in 1498.
Question 2.
Explain the important feature of Indian agriculture.
Answer:
An important feature of Indian agriculture was the large number of crops that were cultivated. The peasant in India was more knowledgeable about many crops as compared to peasants in most of the world at the time. A variety of food grains like wheat, rice, and millets were grown apart from lentils and oilseeds. Many other commercial crops were also grown such as sugarcane, cotton, and indigo. Other than the general food crops, south India had a regional specialization in pepper, cinnamon, spices, and coconut.
In general, two different crops were grown in different seasons, which protected the productivity of the soil. Maize and tobacco were two new crops which were introduced after the arrival of the Europeans. Many new varieties of fruit or horticultural crops like papaya, pineapple, guava, and cashew nut were also introduced which came from the west, especially America. Potatoes, chilies, and tomatoes also became an integral part of Indian food.