Chapter
5: The Age of Industrialisation
Choose the
correct option:
Question 1.
Who set up the first Indian Jute Mill in Calcutta?
(a) G.D. Birla (b)
Seth Hukumchand
(c) Jamsetjee Nusserwanjee Tata (d)
Dwarkanath Tagore
Question 2.
A fuller’s job is to
(a) pick up wool (b)
sort wool according to its fibre
(c) gather cloth by pleating (d)
carry wool to the spinner
Question 3.
Which of the following countries faced labour shortage in the nineteenth century?
(a) America (b)
Britain (c) France (d) Germany
Question 4.
The ports of Surat and Hoogly decayed in the
(a) sixteenth century (b)
seventeenth century
(c) eighteenth century (d)
nineteenth century
Question 5.
The first cotton mill in India was established in
(a) Madras (b) Calcutta (c) Gujarat (d) Bombay
Question 6.
Dwarkanath Tagore was alan
(a) philanthropist (b)
educationist (c) social reformer (d) industrialist
Question 7.
Why did the weavers suffer from a problem of raw cotton?
(a) The cotton crop perished (b)
Raw cotton exports increased
(c) Local markets shrank (d) Export market collapsed
Question 8.
In Victorian Britain the upper classes- aristocratic class and bourgeoisie
preferred handmade goods because:
(a) they were made from imported material.
(b) the handmade goods came to symbolize refinement and class.
(c) they were better finished.
(d) only upper class could afford the expensive items.
Question 9.
By late 19th century why did the British manufacturers print calendars for
advertisements?
(a) Indian people were fond of using calendars in their houses.
(b) Unlike newspapers and magazines, calendars were used even by people who
did not know how to read or write.
(c) It was cheaper to advertise goods through calendars.
(d) It used to add beauty to the room.
Question 10.
Which of the following innovations helped the weavers in increasing
productivity and compete with mill sector?
(a) Spining jenny (b) Fly
shuttle (c) Cotton Gin (d)
Roller
Question 11.
What do you mean by ‘Gomastha’?
(a) An officer of the Company who acted as a go-between the Company and Indian
traders
(b) An officer of the East India Company who looked after the textile trade
(c) A paid servant of the Company who supervised weavers, collected supplies
and examined the quality of the cloth
(d) None of these
Question 12.
According to historians, who was the typical worker in the mid-nineteenth
century?
(a) Craftsperson and labourer (b)
Machine operator
(c) Unskilled labour (d)
None of these
Question 13.
What do you mean by Carding?
(a) In spinning
(b) In weaving
(c) In which cotton or wool fibres are prepared for spinning
(d) In which finishing of cloth is done
Question 14.
Who was the Staplers and Fullers?
(a) Gathers cloth by pleating (b)
Sorts wool according to its fibre
(c) Both a and b (d) None of
these
Question 15.
What was the reason behind new merchants could not set up business in the towns
in Europe?
(a) The rules became barrier
(b) Scarcity of product to start any business
(c) The powerful trade guilds and urban crafts made it difficult
(d) None of these
Question 16.
Which pre-colonial port connected India to the Gulf countries and the Red Sea
ports?
(a) Bombay (b) Hooghly (c) Surat (d) Machhalipatanam
Question 17.
Who produced music book that Dawn of the Century?
(a) New Comen (b) James Watt (c) E. T. Paul (d) None of these
Question 18.
What were supply during the First World War from Indian factories?
(a) Jute bags and cloth for army uniforms (b)
Tents and leather boots
(c) Horse and mule saddles (d)
All of these
Question 19.
When did the export of Indian yarn to China declined?
(a) 1906 (b) 1910 (c) 1915 (d) 1902
Question 20.
Which War caused new problems for Indian weavers?
(a) The American Civil War (b)
First world war
(c) Second world war (d)
None of these
Question 21.
Who was Dwarkanath Tagore?
(a) A social reformer (b) Musician (c) Industrialist (d) Painter
Question 22.
In 1917 who set up the first Indian jute mill in Calcutta?
(a) Seth Hukumchand (b) G.D.
Birla (c) Jamsedjee Tata (d) None of the
above
Question 23.
In which century, the exports of British cotton goods increased dramatically?
(a) 17th century (b) 19th
century (c) 20th century (d) 18th century
Question 24.
During the 19th century, Which were the most dynamic industries in Britain?
(a) Cotton and metal (b) Metal and
sugar (c) Sugar and cotton (d) None of these
Question 25.
What are the problems faced by the cotton weavers in India?
(a) Export market had collapsed (b)
They did not have good quality cotton
(c) Imported goods were cheap (d)
All of the above
Picture-based
Questions:
Question 1.
Look at the given picture taken from Textbook Page 125 and then answer the
questions that follow:
(i) What do you see in the above picture? What is the goddess shown offering?
(ii) What message does the manufacturer want to convey to the people of India?
(iii) How did people of India support the swadeshi movement?
Answer:
(i) In the above picture, the goddess is offering clothes to the people.
(ii) The manufacturer wants to convey to the people of India that it is also
the will of goddess that people should use country made things.
(iii) The people of India supported the swadeshi movement using country made
things.
The Age of Industrialisation Class 10
2016
Short Answer Type Questions [3 Marks]
Question 1.
How did the seasonality of employment affect the lives of Indian workers during
18th century? Explain.
Answer:
Ans. Seasonality of employment affected the lives of the Indian workers during
the 18th century in the following ways.
Seasonality
of work meant prolonged period of unemployment. Workers were forced again on
streets.
Many went
back to their villages.
Others
looked for odd jobs in the cities.
Question 2.
What were guilds? How did they make it difficult for new merchants to set
business in towns of England? Explain.
Answer:
Guilds were the associations of artisans or merchants who controlled the
practise of their craft and trade in a particular city. They were very powerful
as they were granted monopoly rights by the rulers to produce and trade in
specific product. They themselves trained the people in their trade or craft.
They regulated competition and restricted the entry of new people in the trade.
This made it difficult for the new merchants to set up their business in towns
of England.
Long Answer Type Question [5 Marks]
Question 3.
“Historians now have come to increasingly recognize that the typical worker in
the mid-nineteenth century was not a machine operator but the traditional
craftsperson and labourer.” Analyse the statement.
Answer:
The typical worker in the mid-nineteenth century was not a machine operator but
the traditional craftsperson and labourer.
Less than
20% of the total workforce Was employed in advanced technological industrial
centres.
The
traditional craftsmen and their handmade things were more popular as
aristocratic class preferred handmade items. It defined their class and status.
Much of the
industries were based on season like food processing, pottery, book binding,
catering, ship repairing, etc. Machines would be huge investment with no work.
They thus preferred hand labour.
There were
wide range of products that could only be produced by hand because of their
varied designs, better finishing and specific shapes. Machines would produce
similar products.
There was no
shortage of human hands. Producers were thus in no state to shift to machines.
2015
Short Answer Type Questions [3 Marks]
Question 4.
Explain the role played by advertisements in creating new consumers for the
British products.
Answer:
From the very beginning of the industrial age, advertisements have played an
important role in expanding markets for products and shaped a new consumer
culture.
Advertisements
created an inspiration among people to consume those products. People began to
believe that consuming British products meant acquiring a higher social status
akin to the British.
To impress
Indian consumers, images of Indian gods and goddesses were used to show divine
approval to the goods to be sold.
Advertisements
made products appear desirable and necessary. So people were more confident
while buying them.
Question 5.
Why did the East India Company appoint gomashthas? Give three reasons.
Answer:
East India company appointed gomashthas because of the following reasons.
The British
wanted to develop a system of management and control to eliminate competition,
control costs and ensure regular supplies of cotton and silk goods.
For that,
the British appointed a paid servant, called the gomastha, to supervise
weavers, collect supplies and examine the quality of cloth.
It prevented
company weavers from dealing with other buyers. Those who took loans had to
hand over the cloth they produced to the gomastha. They could not take it to
any other trader.
Question 6.
Why was it difficult for East India Company to procure regular supplies of
goods for export in the beginning? Explain.
Answer:
East India Company was finding it difficult to procure regular supplies of
goods for export in the beginning because of the following reasons.
Apart from
Britain, there were other European trading companies, like the French, Dutch
and Portuguese, competing for woven cloth.
It gave
opportunities to the weavers and the supply merchants to sell commodities at a
high rate to the best buyer. So prices were high.
East India
Company also did not have political control to impose its monopoly as it did
later.
Question 7.
How did industries develop in India in the second half of the nineteenth
century? Explain.
Answer:
The following are the ways in which industries developed in India in the second
half of the nineteenth century.
Many Indians
benefited from the opium trade with China by becoming junior players. When
opportunities of investment in industries opened, many of them invested in this
sector.
In Bombay, Dinshaw
Petit and Jamsetjee Nusserwanjee Tata invested in industries after earning
profits from exports to China and cotton exports to England.
Many
merchants, especially in Madras, had trade links in Burma, Middle -East and
East Africa. Others were engaged in banking and financing activities. When
conditions became favourable for industrial advancement in India, many of them
set up factories.
Long Answer Type Questions [5 Marks]
Question 8.
“By the first decade of the twentieth century a series of changes affected the
pattern of industrialization in India.” Support the statement with examples.
Answer:
The following series of changes affected the pattern of industrialization in
India.
Swadeshi
movement gathered momentum in the first decade of the twentieth century.
Nationalists mobilised people to boycott foreign cloth and use Indian-made
textile.
Industrial
groups also organised themselves to protect their collective interests,
pressurising the government to increase tariff protection and grant other
concessions.
There was a
decline in Indian yarn exports, so industrialists in India began shifting from
yarn production to cloth production.
The First
World War created a dramatically new situation. Indian industries were called
to produce war needs.
New factories
were set up and old ones ran multiple shifts. Many new workers were employed
and everyone was made to work longer hours.
Over the war
years Indian industrial production boomed and Indian industries consolidated
their position and captured home market.
Question 9.
Why could Manchester never recapture its old position in the Indian market
after the First World War? Explain.
Answer:
Manchester could never recapture its old position in the Indian market after
the First World War because of the following reasons.
The First
World War created a dramatically new situation which occupied British mills for
aiding war production to meet the needs of the army.
Manchester
imports into India declined. This gave Indian mills an opportunity to supply to
the Indian market.
As the war
stretched, Indian factories also supported the war effort by supplying war
needs like jute bags, cloth for army uniforms, tents and leather boots, horse
and mule saddles and a host of other items.
New
factories were established and old ones ran more than one shifts. New workers
were employed and work hour increased. It consolidated the position of Indian
industries.
After the
war, Britain could not modernise and compete with the United States, Germany
and Japan. The production from Manchester collapsed and export fell.
2014
Short Answer Type Questions [3 Marks]
Question 10.
Describe the condition of the workers in the nineteenth century in England.
Answer:
The lifestyle of the workers of mid-nineteenth century in Britain was as under.
Abundance of
labour created a critical situation for workers. Job seekers were more in
number than the jobs. The possibility of getting a job depended on friendship
network and kin relations.
Waiting
periods were long, labourers spent nights under bridges or in night shelters.
Seasonality
of work further made the situation worse. Many were forced to do odd jobs.
Prices
increased with increase in income, which diminished wage increase.
Another
problem was that the number of days of work determined the average daily
income.Thus, it could be summed that workers led a miserable life in the
nineteenth century in England.
Question 11.
“In eighteenth-century Europe, the peasants and artisans in the countryside
readily agreed to work for the merchants.” Explain any three reasons.
Answer:
The peasants and artisans in countryside readily agreed to work for merchants
because of the following reasons.
With the end
of open field system and enclosing of commons, poor peasants had to look for
alternate source of income to survive.
Many
peasants and artisans owned small plots of land, which did not provide
enough produce and work for all household members.
By working
for merchants, the peasants and artisans could retain in the countryside and
cultivate their land. Hence, when advances were offered to them, they readily
accepted. Income from working for merchants supplemented their savings. It also
allowed them to use their household 1 members to the maximum.
Question 12.
Explain any three reasons for the clashes between the weavers and the
gomasthas.
Answer:
Refer to answer 21.
Question 13.
Why did industrial production in India increase during the First World War?
Give any three reasons.
Answer:
Refer to answer 20.
Question 14.
Explain the effects of East India Company’s exploitative methods of asserting
monopoly over trade
Answer:
The following were the effects of the East India Company’s exploitative methods
of asserting monopoly over trade.
Many
peasants and weavers deserted the villages and had to migrate to other villages.
In many
places, there were revolts and clashes against the Company and its officials.
Weavers
began refusing loans and closed down their workshops. They took to agricultural
labourers.
Question 15.
Describe any three functions of gomasthas.
Answer:
Gomasthas were connecting links between the British and the weavers. The
following were the main functions of the Gomasthas.
Supervision
of weavers for their work
Collection
of finished products
Examination
of quality of products
Giving
punishments to weavers and information to British
Question 16.
Who were the jobbers? Explain their main functions.
Answer:
Jobbers were the paid workers of the industrialists. They were old and most
trusted workers. The following were the main functions of the jobbers.
Jobbers got
the people from villages, ensured their jobs and helped them to settle in the
city.
They often
helped the workers by providing them money in time of crises.
Question 17.
Why did the upper classes in Victorian period preferred things produced by
hand?
Answer:
The upper class in Victorian period preferred things produced by hand because
of the following reasons.
Handmade
products symbolized refinement and class.
They were
better finished and carefully designed.
Handmade
products are of different designs.
Long Answer Type Questions [5 Marks]
Question 18.
What was Proto-industrialization ? Explain the importance of
proto-industrialization.
Answer:
Proto-industrialization refers to the earliest phase of industrialisation,
whereproduction was mainly done by hands. It was controlled by merchants or
trade guilds having monopoly over production and trade. Household members
carried out the production process. The production units were set up in
countryside. Proto-industrialization was important because of the following
reasons.
It enabled
the efficient utilisation of work force in productive work.
Income from
production supplemented the meagre income of poor peasants and weavers.
Global
demands were fulfilled.
It led to
the base for proper industrialization in the coming years.
Question 19.
Explain any five ways by which new markets and consumes were created in India
by British manufacturers.
Answer:
The following are the five ways by which new markets and consumers were created
in India by British manufacturers.
The products
were advertised through newspapers, magazine, hoardings, street walls, etc.
Products
like cloth ‘ ere labelled with place of manufacturing along with company’s name
to make the consumer familiar with the product.
Images of Indian
gods and goddesses were also illustrated to show the association with gods and
divide approval of the product by gods.
Manufactures
also printed calendars to popularise their product. It appealed the people who
could not read.
Nationalist
messages were also used to popularise the product and expand market with the
country.
Question 20.
“The First World War created the favourable conditions for the development of
industries in India.” Support the statement with suitable examples.
Answer:
The First World War created favourable conditions for the development of
industries in India in the following ways.
British
mills became busy with war production and Manchester imports into India
declined.
Suddenly
Indian factories had a vast home market to supply goods.
Indian
factories were called upon to supply war needs like jute bags, cloth for army
uniforms, tents and leather boots, horse and mule saddles and a host of other
items.
New
factories were set up and old ones ran multiple shifts. Many new workers were
employed and everyone was made to work longer hours. Over the war years
industrial production boomed.
After the
war, Manchester could not recapture its old position in the Indian market. The
economy of Britain collapsed after the war. Cotton production and exports fell.
Local industrialists in India consolidated their position, substituting foreign
goods and capturing the home market.
Question 21.
Why were there frequent clashes between Gomasthas and weavers in the villages?
Explain five reasons.
Answer:
The following were the reasons for the clashes between the gomasthas and the
weavers in the villages.
The
gomasthas were outsiders and had no social link with villagers.
They were
arrogant and marched into village with sepoys and peons.
They
punished weavers for delay in supply.
The weavers
could not sell their cloth to other buyers because they had to sell to the
company due to the loans they took from them.
They had to
accept the price offered by the company to them, although it was very low.
2013
Short Answer Type Question [3 Marks]
Question 22.
How did many Indian Entrepreneurs survive despite tight economic controls
imposed by the British Government?
Answer:
Many Indian Entrepreneurs survive despite tight economic controls imposed by
the British Government because of the following reasons.
When Indian
businessmen began to set up industries in the late nineteenth century, they
avoided competing with Manchester goods in the Indian market.
As the
Swadeshi movement reached its peak, nationalists advised people
to boycott foreign cloth and it worked.
Industrial
groups organised themselves to protect their collective interests too. They
pressurised the government to increase tariff protection and grant other
concessions.
When the
export of Indian yarn to China declined because of Chinese and Japanese yarn,
industrialists in India began to produce cloth
Long Answer Type Question [5 Marks]
Question 23.
Describe the contributions of the early industrialists of India in shaping the
industrial development of India.
Answer:
The history of Indian business group dates back to trade with China. Indians
have been involved in trade, provided finance, procured supplies and shipped
consignments. It proved profitable to Indian business groups.The profits thus
earned found their way to fulfil the vision of developing industrial
enterprises in India. Dwarkanath Tagore started to give shape to the vision by
investing and setting up six joint stock companies in Bengal between 1830s and
1840s. Industrial development in India suffered a setback in 1840s owing to
business crises.Later, Parsis like Dinshaw Petil and Jamesetjee Nusserwanjee
Tata began building huge industrial empires in Bombay with the wealth
accumulated from exports to China and shipments to England. Similarly, Seth
Hukumchand, a Marwari businessman, started the first jute mill in Calcutta in
1917. The ancestors of GD Birla carried on the same initiative.Apart from this,
there were other commercial groups that operated within the trade network
indirectly. Sensing the right opportunity to invest, many of them established
their industries
2012
Long Answer Type Questions [5 Marks]
Question 24.
Why was East India Company keen on expanding textile exports from India
during the 1760? Explain any three reasons.
Answer:
The East India Company was keen on expanding textile exports from India during
the 1760s because of the following reasons.
Consolidation
of East India Company power after the 1760s did not initially lead to a decline
in textile export from India.
British cotton
industries had not yet expanded. They needed raw material as well as finished
goods to feed their industries and satisfy their demand in England.
Fine Indian
textile was very popular in Europe and therefore was in great demand.
As compared
to other countries, textile from India besides being popular, was available at
a cheaper price.
Textile
trade from India was thus second to be very profitable for the company.
Question 25.
Explain any three measures used by producers to expand their markets in the 19th
century.
Answer:
Refer to answer 16.
Question 26.
Describe any five major problems faced by new European merchants in setting up
their industries in towns before industrial revolution.
Answer:
It was not easy for the new European merchants to set up their industries in
towns because of the following problems.
With the
expansion of world trade, merchants wanted to expand their production by
setting up production units. But the urban Crafts and trade guilds were so
powerful that new enterprise could not operate.
There were
associations of producers that trained craftspeople, maintained control over
production, regulated competition and prices, and restricted new entry into the
trade.
Rulers had
also granted monopoly rights to produce and trade in specific products to the
guilds.
Production
units were set up in the country side. But the merchants were based in towns
and work was done in countryside.
Work in the
countryside was scattered like purchase of wool from stapler, carried to
spinner, weaver, fuller and then to dyer. Finishing was done in London. This
was a time and energy-consuming process.
2011
Short Answer Type Question [3 Marks]
Question 27.
Mention any three restrictions imposed by the British government upon the
Indian merchants in 19th century.
Answer:
The following restrictions were imposed by the British government upon the
Indian merchants in the 19th century.
Monopoly on
trade was imposed. Indian merchants were not allowed to
trade in items under colonial control. They were not allowed enough space for
trade operations.
Indians were
barred from trading with Europe in manufactured goods. They could only export
raw materials and foodgrains.
Indian
businessmen were not allowed to join the European Managing Agencies. Indians
could only provide capital while Managing Agencies made investments and took
business-related decisions.
Long Answer Type Questions [5 Marks]
Question 28.
Explain any three problems faced by the Indian weavers in 1850s.
Answer:
The following problems were faced by Indian weavers by the turn of the 19th
century.
Because of
heavy import duty on Indian cotton textile, export market in India collapsed.
Local market was flooded with Manchester textile. Being produced by machines,
it was cheaper than Indian-made textile. Weavers could not compete with this
situation. Weaving regions declined and were desolated.
Weavers were
not able to procure good-quality raw cotton as most of it was exported. The
low-quality raw cotton stood nowhere in the market.
With the
increase of raw cotton export, price of raw cotton also shot up. Thus, the
weavers could not afford to buy it and starved of supplies.
Apart from
that, factory production in India had started, Machine-made Indian goods also
flooded the market. Weavers, thus, could not survive in a situation where there
were problems all around.
Question 29.
Throw light on production during the proto-industrialisation phase in Europe in
the 17th and 18th century with an example.
Answer:
Production during proto-industrialisation phase in Europe was as follows.
Merchants
began moving to countryside to set up production units.
Advances
were offered to the peasants and artisans to persude them to produce for
international market.
Production
was carried out in stages. Wool purchased from stapler was sent to spinners,
weavers, fullers and then dyers. Finishing was done in London before export.
Production
was controlled by merchants.
Production
was done within family farms, employing family members
2010
Short Answer Type Questions [3 Marks]
Question 30.
Explain the main features of proto-industrialisation.
Answer:
Proto-industrialization refers to the earliest phase of industrialization. The
following were the main features of proto-industrialization.
The
production was done by hands.
It was
controlled by merchants or guilds who had monopoly rights to produce and trade
goods.
Generally
family members were involved in the production process.
Production
was carried out in countryside.
Question 31.
Describe the lifestyle of the British workers of the nineteenth Century.
Answer:
Refer to answer 7.
2009
Short Answer Type Questions [3 Marks]
Question 32.
Explain the impact of the First World War on Indian Industries.
Answer:
Refer to answer 20.
Question 33.
Explain any three problems faced by Indian cotton weavers by the turn of the
nineteenth century.
Answer:
Refer to answer 28.
**********
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