St. Lawrence High School 27, Ballygunge Circular Road

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

St. Lawrence High School 27, Ballygunge Circular Road 3/24/2021 Entab - CampusCare®| School ERP Software ST. LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL 27, BALLYGUNGE CIRCULAR ROAD ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Class : 8 Subject : HISTORY Term : FIRST TERM Max Marks : 60 Q 1 : Which invader took away the Peacock Throne of Shah Jahan? Marks : 1 1 . Ahmad Shah Abdali 2 . Shah Jahan 3 . Nadir Shah ( This Answer is Correct ) 4 . Mahmud of Ghazni ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 2 : Who was required to maintain a fixed quota of troops? Marks : 1 1 . Jagirdars 2 . Nobles 3 . Kings 4 . Mansabdars ( This Answer is Correct ) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 3 : In which year did Chin Qilich Khan carve out the state of Hyderabad? Marks : 1 1 . 1724 ( This Answer is Correct ) 2 . 1768 3 . 1718 4 . 1719 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 4 : Who was Govind Singh? Marks : 1 1 . Sikh Guru ( This Answer is Correct ) 2 . Brahmin Guru 3 . Muslim Guru 4 . Jain Guru ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 5 : Who was Banda Bahadur? Marks : 1 1 . Nizam ruler 2 . English ruler 3 . Sikh ruler ( This Answer is Correct ) 4 . Jain ruler ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ https://www.slscampuscare.in/QuestionBank/QuestionBankReport?menuid=501 1/11 3/24/2021 Entab - CampusCare®| School ERP Software Q 6 : Who was Hyder Ali originally? Marks : 1 1 . Ruler 2 . King 3 . Noble 4 . Foot soldier ( This Answer is Correct ) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 7 : When was the third battle of Panipat fought? Marks : 1 1 . 1861 2 . 1761 ( This Answer is Correct ) 3 . 1718 4 . 1751 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 8 : Whch rulers neglected trade and commerce? Marks : 1 1 . Sikhs 2 . Rohillas 3 . Marathas ( This Answer is Correct ) 4 . Mughals ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 9 : When was the Battle of Plassey fought? Marks : 1 1 . 1767 2 . 1717 3 . 1818 4 . 1757 ( This Answer is Correct ) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 10 : Who led the British forces during the Battle of Plassey? Marks : 1 1 . Robert Clive ( This Answer is Correct ) 2 . .Lord William 3 . Dupleix 4 . Robert Barry ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 11 : Who was the Commander-in-Chief of the Nawab during battle of Plassey? Marks : 1 1 . Lord Clive 2 . Lord Cornwallis 3 . Mir Jafar ( This Answer is Correct ) 4 . Shiraj ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ https://www.slscampuscare.in/QuestionBank/QuestionBankReport?menuid=501 2/11 3/24/2021 Entab - CampusCare®| School ERP Software Q 12 : Who was the Nawab of Bengal during Battle of Plassey? Marks : 1 1 . Alivardi Khan 2 . Murshid Quli Khan 3 . .Mir Jafar 4 . Shiraj- ud- daulah ( This Answer is Correct ) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 13 : Who was defeated in the Battle of Plassey? Marks : 1 1 . Mir Jafar 2 . Mir Qasim 3 . Shiraj-ud-daulah ( This Answer is Correct ) 4 . Shuja-ud-ddin ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 14 : Who was the winner in the Battle of Plassey? Marks : 1 1 . French 2 . British ( This Answer is Correct ) 3 . Spanish 4 . Danish ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 15 : Who was a puppet in the hands of the British? Marks : 1 1 . Mir Jafar ( This Answer is Correct ) 2 . Mir Qasim 3 . Siraj 4 . Alivardi Khan ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 16 : Which battle is a landmark in the history of India? Marks : 1 1 . Battle of Plassey ( This Answer is Correct ) 2 . Battle of Sadowa 3 . Battle of Panipat 4 . Battle of Ghagra ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 17 : Who got a foothold in India? Marks : 1 1 . British ( This Answer is Correct ) 2 . French 3 . Portugese 4 . Spanish ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ https://www.slscampuscare.in/QuestionBank/QuestionBankReport?menuid=501 3/11 3/24/2021 Entab - CampusCare®| School ERP Software Q 18 : Which ruler was deposed in 1765 in Bengal after the Battle of Buxar? Marks : 1 1 . Mir Qasim ( This Answer is Correct ) 2 . Lord Clive 3 . Muhammad Shah 4 . Mahmud Khan ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 19 : Who was made the new Nawab after Mir Jafar? Marks : 1 1 . Alivardi Khan 2 . Murshid Quli Khan 3 . Mir Jafar 4 . Mir Qasim ( This Answer is Correct ) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 20 : Who rewarded the Company by granting it the right to collect revenue? Marks : 1 1 . Mir Jafar 2 . Lord Clive 3 . Lord Cornwallis 4 . Mir Qasim ( This Answer is Correct ) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 21 : Which ruler wanted to make himself free from the control of the British? Marks : 1 1 . .Lord Clive 2 . Shiraj 3 . Muhammad Shah 4 . Mir Qasim ( This Answer is Correct ) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 22 : Who dismissed the court officials who favoured the British? Marks : 1 1 . Hyder Ali 2 . Bahadur Shah Zafar 3 . Mir Qasim ( This Answer is Correct ) 4 . Mir Jafar ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 23 : Who abolished all duties on internal trade in Bengal after the Battle of Plassey? Marks : 1 1 . Mir Jafar 2 . Shiraj 3 . Rai Durlabh 4 . Mir Qasim ( This Answer is Correct ) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ https://www.slscampuscare.in/QuestionBank/QuestionBankReport?menuid=501 4/11 3/24/2021 Entab - CampusCare®| School ERP Software Q 24 : Who became the ruler of Awadh in 1739? Marks : 1 1 . Muhammad Shah 2 . Jahandar Shah 3 . Saadat Khan 4 . Safdar Jung ( This Answer is Correct ) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 25 : Which ruler's invasion shook the Mughal Empire? Marks : 1 1 . Alexander 2 . Aryans 3 . Nadir Shah ( This Answer is Correct ) 4 . Darius ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 26 : Which ruler fought with the Deccan rulers but failed? Marks : 1 1 . Tipu Sultan 2 . Mahmud of Ghazni 3 . Muhammad Ghori 4 . Aurangzeb ( This Answer is Correct ) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 27 : Which Mughal ruler was removed by the British after the Sepoy Mutiny? Marks : 1 1 . Shah Alam II 2 . Jodha Bai 3 . Jahangir 4 . Bahadur Shah Zafar ( This Answer is Correct ) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 28 : In which year did the Sayyid brothers make Muhammad Shah the Emperor? Marks : 1 1 . 1723 2 . 1821 3 . 1767 4 . 1720 ( This Answer is Correct ) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 29 : Who was the ‘Subadar’? Marks : 1 1 . Social head 2 . Noble 3 . Political head ( This Answer is Correct ) 4 . King ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ https://www.slscampuscare.in/QuestionBank/QuestionBankReport?menuid=501 5/11 3/24/2021 Entab - CampusCare®| School ERP Software Q 30 : When did the Mughal Empire decline rapidly? Marks : 1 1 . After 1707 ( This Answer is Correct ) 2 . After 1609 3 . After 1857 4 . After 1526 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 31 : In which year was Bahadur Shah Zafar removed? Marks : 1 1 . 1787 2 . 1818 3 . 1718 4 . 1858 ( This Answer is Correct ) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 32 : When was the Battle of Buxar fought? Marks : 1 1 . 1717 2 . 1764 ( This Answer is Correct ) 3 . 1719 4 . 1720 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Q 33 : Who ruled in Bengal after Alivardi Khan? Marks : 1 1 . Suja-ud-din 2 . Rai Durlabh 3 . Jagat Sheth 4 . Siraj-ud-Daulah ( This Answer is Correct ) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Recommended publications
  • Uhm Phd 9519439 R.Pdf
    INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality or the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely. event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. Each original is also photographed in one exposure and is included in reduced form at the back of the book. Photographs included in the original manuscript have been reproduced xerographically in this copy. Higher quality 6" x 9" black and white photographic prints are available for any photographs or illustrations appearing in this copy for an additional charge. Contact UMI directly to order. UMI A Bell & Howell Information Company 300 North Zeeb Road. Ann Arbor. MI48106·1346 USA 313!761-47oo 800:521-0600 Order Number 9519439 Discourses ofcultural identity in divided Bengal Dhar, Subrata Shankar, Ph.D. University of Hawaii, 1994 U·M·I 300N. ZeebRd. AnnArbor,MI48106 DISCOURSES OF CULTURAL IDENTITY IN DIVIDED BENGAL A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE DIVISION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN POLITICAL SCIENCE DECEMBER 1994 By Subrata S.
    [Show full text]
  • Top 200 Questions of History
    Top 200 Questions of History Top 200 Questions of History 1. Twenty Point Programme was launched in 1975 by – Indira Gandhi 2. The famous Quit India Resolution was passed on? August 8, 1942 3. Which university can be considered as an epitome of education in the Gupta Dynasty? Nalanda University 4. During the Mughal period, which trader was the first to come to India? Portuguese 5. Akbar’s guardian teacher was – Bairam Khan 6. International boundary between India and Pakistan is demarcated by – Radcliffe Line 7. The Dal Khalsa was founded by? Kapur Singh 8. The Governor-General was given the power to issue ordinances by the act of? Indian Councils Act ,1861 9. The High Commissioner for India in the United Kingdom must be appointed by __________? The Government of India 10. As per Act of 1919 the lower house of the Central Legislature was known as __________? Legislative Assembly 11. Who had become the first Governor-General of India after independence? Lord Mountbatten 12. What was the type of marriage in the Vedic period in which, in place of the dowry, there was a token bride price of a cow and a bull? Arsa Top 200 Questions of History 13. Who was the Greek ambassador in the court of Chandragupta Maurya? Megasthanes 14. Who constructed the 84 thousands Stupa? Ashoka 15. Jahangir (1605–1627 AD) was the ruler of which dynasty? Mughal 16. Who pioneered the guerrilla warfare methods? Shivaji 17. UNESCO Cultural World Heritage site Humayun Tomb’s construction completed in – 1572 AD 18. In Akbar's regime, _____ was the military head.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Social Science Our Pasts
    There was a time when historians were fascinated with dates. There were heated debates about the dates on which rulers were crowned or battles were fought. In the common-sense notion, history was synonymous with dates. You may have heard people say, “I find history boring because it is all about memorising dates.” Is such a conception true? History is certainly about changes that occur over time. It is about finding out how things were in the past and how things have changed. As soon as we compare the past with the present we refer to time, we talk of “before” and “after”. Living in the world we do not always ask historical questions about what we see around us. We take things for granted, as if what we see has always been in the world we inhabit. But most of us have our moments of wonder, when we are curious, and we ask questions that actually are historical. Watching Fig. 1 – Brahmans offering the someone sip a cup of tea at a roadside tea stall you Shastras to Britannia, frontispiece to the first map produced by may wonder – when did people begin to drink tea or James Rennel, 1782 coffee? Looking out of the window of a train you may Rennel was asked by Robert ask yourself – when were railways built and how did Clive to produce maps of people travel long distances before the age of railways? Hindustan. An enthusiastic Reading the newspaper in the morning you may be supporter of British conquest of curious to know how people got to hear about things India, Rennel saw preparation of maps as essential to the before newspapers began to be printed.
    [Show full text]
  • CC-12:HISTORY of INDIA(1750S-1857) II.EXPANSION and CONSOLIDATION of COLONIAL POWER
    CC-12:HISTORY OF INDIA(1750s-1857) II.EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION OF COLONIAL POWER: (A) MERCANTILISM,FOREIGN TRADE AND EARLY FORMS OF EXTRACTION FROM BENGAL The coming of the Europeans to the Indian subcontinent was an event of great significance as it ultimately led to revolutionary changes in its destiny in the future. Europe’s interest in India goes back to the ancient times when lucrative trade was carried on between India and Europe. India was rich in terms of spices, textile and other oriental products which had huge demand in the large consumer markets in the west. Since the ancient time till the medieval period, spices formed an important part of European trade with India. Pepper, ginger, chillies, cinnamon and cloves were carried to Europe where they fetched high prices. Indian silk, fine Muslin and Indian cotton too were much in demand among rich European families. Pearls and other precious stone also found high demand among the European elites. Trade was conducted both by sea and by land. While the sea routes opened from the ports of the western coast of India and went westward through the Persian Gulf and the Red Sea to Alexandria and Constantinople, Indian trade goods found their way across the Mediterranean to the commercials hubs of Venice and Genoa, from where they were then dispersed throughout the main cities of Europe. The old trading routes between the east and the west came under Turkish control after the Ottoman conquest of Asia Minor and the capture of Constantinople in1453.The merchants of Venice and Genoa monopolised the trade between Europe and Asia and refused to let the new nation states of Western Europe, particularly Spain and Portugal, have any share in the trade through these old routes.
    [Show full text]
  • Expansion and Consolidation of Colonial Power
    Expansion and Consolidation of Colonial Power Subject: History Unit: Expansion and Consolidation of Colonial Power Lesson: Expansion and Consolidation of Colonial Power Lesson Developer : Prof. Lakshmi Subramanian College/Department : Professor, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Kolkata Institute of Lifelong Learning, University of Delhi Expansion and Consolidation of Colonial Power Table of contents Chapter 2: Expansion and consolidation of colonial power • 2.1: Expansion and consolidation of colonial power • Summary • Exercises • Glossary • Further readings Institute of Lifelong Learning, University of Delhi Expansion and Consolidation of Colonial Power 2.1: Expansion and consolidation of colonial power Introduction The second half of the 18th century saw the formal induction of the English East India Company as a power in the Indian political system. The battle of Plassey (1757) followed by that of Buxar (1764) gave the Company access to the revenues of the subas of Bengal, Bihar and Orissa and a subsequent edge in the contest for paramountcy in Hindustan. Control over revenues resulted in a gradual shift in the orientation of the Company’s agenda – from commerce to land revenue – with important consequences. This chapter will trace the development of the Company’s rise to power in Bengal, the articulation of commercial policies in the context of Mercantilism that developed as an informing ideology in Europe and that found limited application in India by some of the Company’s officials. This found expression until the 1750’s in the form of trade privileges, differential customs payments and fortifications of Company settlements all of which combined to produce an alternative nucleus of power within the late Mughal set up.
    [Show full text]
  • The Black Hole of Empire
    Th e Black Hole of Empire Th e Black Hole of Empire History of a Global Practice of Power Partha Chatterjee Princeton University Press Princeton and Oxford Copyright © 2012 by Princeton University Press Requests for permission to reproduce material from this work should be sent to Permissions, Princeton University Press Published by Princeton University Press, 41 William Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08540 In the United Kingdom: Princeton University Press, 6 Oxford Street, Woodstock, Oxfordshire OX20 1TW press.princeton.edu All Rights Reserved Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Chatterjee, Partha, 1947- Th e black hole of empire : history of a global practice of power / Partha Chatterjee. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-691-15200-4 (hardcover : alk. paper)— ISBN 978-0-691-15201-1 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Bengal (India)—Colonization—History—18th century. 2. Black Hole Incident, Calcutta, India, 1756. 3. East India Company—History—18th century. 4. Imperialism—History. 5. Europe—Colonies—History. I. Title. DS465.C53 2011 954'.14029—dc23 2011028355 British Library Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available Th is book has been composed in Adobe Caslon Pro Printed on acid-free paper. ∞ Printed in the United States of America 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 To the amazing surgeons and physicians who have kept me alive and working This page intentionally left blank Contents List of Illustrations ix Preface xi Chapter One Outrage in Calcutta 1 Th e Travels of a Monument—Old Fort William—A New Nawab—Th e Fall
    [Show full text]
  • Battle of Buxar 1764 - UPSC Mains History
    Battle of Buxar 1764 - UPSC Mains History With the advent of Europeans in India, the British East India Company gradually conquered Indian territories. The Battle of Buxar is one such confrontation between the British army and their Indian counterparts which paved the way for the British to rule over India for the next 183 years. The Battle of Buxar took place in 1764 and is an important chapter in Indian Modern History for the IAS Exam. This article will talk about the Battle of Buxar in detail to help UPSC aspirants understand it for the mains examination. You can also download the Battle of Buxar notes PDF from the link provided. What was the Battle of Buxar? It was a battle fought between the English Forces, and a joint army of the Nawab of Oudh, Nawab of Bengal, and the Mughal Emperor. The battle was the result of misuse of trade privileges granted by the Nawab of Bengal and also the colonialist ambitions of East India Company Background of the Battle of Buxar Before the battle of Buxar, one more battle was fought. It was the Battle of Plassey, that gave the British a firm foothold over the region of Bengal. As a result of the Battle of Plassey, Siraj-Ud-Daulah was dethroned as the Nawab of Bengal and was replaced by Mir Jafar (Commander of Siraj's Army.) After Mir Jafar became the new Bengal nawab, the British made him their puppet but Mir Jafar got involved with Dutch East India Company. Mir Qasim (son-in-law of Mir Jafar) was supported by the British to become the new Nawab and under the pressure of the Company, Mir Jafar decided to resign in favour of Mir Kasim.
    [Show full text]
  • The Revolt of 1857
    1A THE REVOLT OF 1857 1. Objectives: After going through this unit the student wilt be able:- a) To understand the background of the Revolt 1857. b) To explain the risings of Hill Tribes. c) To understand the causes of The Revolt of 1857. d) To understand the out Break and spread of the Revolt of 1857. e) To explain the causes of the failure of the Revolt of 1857. 2. Introduction: The East India Company's rule from 1757 to 1857 had generated a lot of discontent among the different sections of the Indian people against the British. The end of the Mughal rule gave a psychological blow to the Muslims many of whom had enjoyed position and patronage under the Mughal and other provincial Muslim rulers. The commercial policy of the company brought ruin to the artisans and craftsman, while the divergent land revenue policy adopted by the Company in different regions, especially the permanent settlement in the North and the Ryotwari settlement in the south put the peasants on the road of impoverishment and misery. 3. Background: The Revolt of 1857 was a major upheaval against the British Rule in which the disgruntled princes, to disconnected sepoys and disillusioned elements participated. However, it is important to note that right from the inception of the East India Company there had been resistance from divergent section in different parts of the sub continent. This resistance offered by different tribal groups, peasant and religious factions remained localized and ill organized. In certain cases the British could putdown these uprisings easily, in other cases the struggle was prolonged resulting in heavy causalities.
    [Show full text]
  • HISTORY MINOR of Revenue and Circuit
    set up by Cornwallis, appointment of commissioners HISTORY MINOR of revenue and circuit. GOVERNORS-GENERAL AND VICEROYS OF INDIA : X. Lord Metcalfe 1835-1836 SIGNIFICANT EVENTS IN THEIR RULE New press law removing restrictions on the press in Governors-General India. I. Warren Hastings 1773-1785 XI. Lord Auckland 1836-1842 1. Regulating Act of 1773. 1. First Afghan War (1838-42) 2. Act of 1781, under which the powers of jurisdiction 2. Death of Ranjit Sing (1839). between the governor-general-in council and the XII. Lord Ellenborough 1842-1844 Supreme Court at Calcutta, were clerly divided. 1. Annexation of Sindh (1843). 3. Pitt's India Act of 1784. 2. War with Gwalior (1843). 4. The Rohilla War of 1774. XIII. Lord Hardinge I 1844-48 5. The First Maratha War in 1775-82 and the Treaty of 1. First Anglo-Sikh War (1845-46) and the Treaty of Lahore Salbai in 1782. (1846). 6. Second Mysore War in 1780-84. 2. Social reforms including abolition of female infanticide 7. Strained relationships with Chait Singh, the Maharaja and human sacrifice. of Benaras, which led to Hastings' subsequent XVI. Lord Dalhousie 1848-1856 impeachment in England. 1. Second Anglo-Sikh War (1848-49) and annexation of 8. foundation of the Asiatic Society of Bengal (1784). Punjab (1849). II. Lord Crnwallis 1786-1793 2. Annexation of Lower Burma or Pegu (1852). 1. Third Mysore War (1790-92) and Treaty of 3. Introduction of the Doctrine of Lapse and annexation Seringapatam (1792)/ of Satara (1848), Jaitpur and Sambhalpur (1849), 2. Cornwallis Code (1793) incorporating several judicial Udaipur (1852), Jhansi (1853), Nagpur (1854) and reforms, and separation of revenue administration and Awadh (1856).
    [Show full text]
  • Scott of Bengal”: Examining the European Legacy in the Historical Novels of Bankimchandra Chatterjee
    “Scott of Bengal”: Examining the European Legacy in the Historical Novels of Bankimchandra Chatterjee Nilanjana Dutta A dissertation submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department English and Comparative Literature Chapel Hill 2009 Approved by: Sucheta Mazumdar John McGowan Eric Downing Srinivas Aravamudan Tony Stewart ABSTRACT Nilanjana Dutta: “Scott of Bengal”: Examining the European Legacy in the Historical Novels of Bankimchandra Chatterjee (Under the direction of Sucheta Mazumdar) It is generally agreed that the novel is of European origin and that it was imported into non-European countries through colonial contact. While acknowledging this European precedence, it is important to also acknowledge the unique ways in which non- European authors indigenized the form to respond to the needs of their contemporary readers who were their intended audience. The works of the nineteenth-century Indian novelist Bankimchandra Chatterjee are a case in point. This dissertation focuses on the role the historical novels of Bankim performed in determining Indian identities at a particular juncture in Indian colonial history. A comparative study with selected novels of Sir Walter Scott, the premier historical novelist of Europe, helps illustrate the singularity of Bankim’s task; Scott and Bankim occupied quite different worlds and their works serve as metaphors of this difference. As the first successful novelist of India, Bankim took on the task of invoking history to create a national identity for a people who, he felt, did not have one. This identity had to be imagined through complex negotiations of race, religion, and gender, each of which required constant redefining.
    [Show full text]
  • History of Aurangzib Based on Original Sources
    |I||UH| HISTORY OF AURANGZIB Vol. 11. Works by Jadunath Sarkar, M.A. 1. History of Aurangzib, based on Persian sources. Rs. Vol. 1. Reign of Shah Jahan, pp. 402. Vol.11. War of Succession, pp.328. 3J each. 2. Anecdotes of Aurangzib (English translation and notes) and Historical Essays, pp. 248. 1-3 text with an 3. Ahkam-i-Alamgiri, Persian English translation {Anecdotes of Aiirang- 5i6) and notes, pp. 72 + 146 ... ... i 4. Chaitanya's Pilgrimages and Teachings, being an English translation of his contem- porary biography, Chaitanya-charita- mrita, Madhya-lila, pp. 320+ ... 2 5. India of Aurangzib : Statistics, Topography and Roads, with translations from the Khulasat-ui-tawarikh and the Chahar Gulshan. (Not a history), pp. 300 ... 2^ 6. Economics of British India, 3rd ed., pp. 300 + (In preparation) .. •3 and Ravindra- 7. Essays, Social Literary, by nath Tagore, translated into English. (In preparation). SOLD BY M. C. Sarkar it Sons, 75, Harrison Road, Calcutta. S. K. Lahiri & Co., 56, College Str., Calcutta. Madras. G. A. Natesan, 3, Shunkurama Chetti Str., D. B. Taraporevala Sons & Co., 103, Medows Str., Bombay. LuzAC & Co., 46, Great Russell Str., LONDON. HISTORY OF AURANGZIB Mainly based on Persian Sources. JADUNATH SARKAR, M.A., Professor, Patna College. Vol. II. War of Succession. M. C. SARKAR & 0. SONS, ^^c ^ ' ]\^' Harrison <" 75, Road, \^ \ ^ ' \ CALCUTTA. * -v ^ >^* 1912. 55. net. Rs. 3-8 As. bs .7 KUNTALINE PRESS. Printed by Purna Chandra Dass, 6i & 62, BovvBAZAR Street, Calcutta. PUBLISHKD BY M. C. SaRKAR & SoNS, 75, Harrison Road, Calcutta. CONTENTS. Chapter XV. Battle of Dharmat. —tries to avert a Jaswant at Uijain, i —his movements, 2 — in his —his battle, 3—his difficulties, 5 treachery ranks, 7 — of 1 1 order battle, plan of battle, 9—contending forces, Van, J2— Rajput Van charges, 14—defence by Aurangzib's left IS— Rajputs destroved, iS—Murad attacks the Imperial — 21— 22— wing, 19 Jaswant's flight, plunder, —Aurangzib's in 23—his memorial buildings, 24 casualties, gain prestige, — Samn- 25—Aurangzib crosses the Chambal, 28 reaches garh, 30.
    [Show full text]
  • Establishment of British Rule in India Till 1857: British Occupation of Bengal- Flexiprep
    9/22/2021 Establishment of British Rule in India Till 1857: British Occupation of Bengal- FlexiPrep FlexiPrep Establishment of British Rule in India Till 1857: British Occupation of Bengal (For CBSE, ICSE, IAS, NET, NRA 2022) Doorsteptutor material for competitive exams is prepared by world's top subject experts: get questions, notes, tests, video lectures and more- for all subjects of your exam. British Occupation of Bengal: Plassey to Buxar (1757 - 1765) The first major battle of the British against Indian power was in Bengal: Bengal witnessed a shift in power from the nawabs to the British from 1757 to 1765. The three nawabs who failed to uphold the sovereignty of the nawabs were Siraj-ud-Daula, Mir Jafar and Mir Kasim. The British controlled the Asian merchants after the Battle of Plessey in 1757. Result of the war: British achieved victory in Bengal Declined Bengal trade In 1757, Siraj-ud-Daula succeeded as Nawab of Bengal. The trade privileges and its misuse by officers and Company became the major reason for the conflict. An imperial farman issued by Farrukhisiyar gave privilege to the Company in export and import. According to this farman, the Company had to pay ₹ 3000 a year to carry duty-free trade in Bengal. Reasons for the Immediate Provocation of Nawab Fortification around Calcutta without permission of nawab. Repeated defiance of nawab՚s authority. Sheltering offenders of the nawab Siraj-ud-Duala՚s attack on Calcutta led to open conflict. The British impose conspiracy cases against nawab. This gave British victory over Nawab in the battle of Plassey.
    [Show full text]