Friday, August 30, 2013

Begum Hazrat Mahal: Important leader of the Revolt of 1857

Begum Hazrat Mahal was one of the important leaders of the Revolt of 1857 which shook the very foundation of the British rule in India. Born a courtesan, she was one of the wives of Nawab Wajid Ali Shah, the ruler of Oudh, who was deposed by the British in 1856 and sent to exile in Calcutta. She led the revolt at Allahabad in Uttar Pradesh.

Acting as a regent of her eleven year old son Brijis Qadr, she ruled Awadh and under her tutelage the administration was reorganized. During the revolt, the residency of Lucknow was raided on her instruction. Providing spirited lead to the rebels she joined Maulvi Ahmadullah at Shahjahanpur.

After her defeat by the English, Begum Hazrat Mahal retreated to Nepal. She refused to accept the pension offered by the British and chose to die unknown in alien country in 1879. She is buried in a grave in Kathmandu. 



Friday, August 16, 2013

Bimbisara: First Great Emperor of India

Vulture’s Peak, Rajagriha|Wikimedia Commons

The most remarkable king of the Haryanka dynasty of the great Magadhan kingdom in the 6th century BC was Bimbisara, also known as Srenika. He ascended the throne in c 545 B.C. He was the first Indian ruler who conceived the idea of an extensive empire. 

He embarked on a policy of imperialism by conquering the little kingdom Anga which had its capital at Champa near modern Bhagalpur in Bihar. In ancient times, the port city of Champa was of substantial commercial significance.

Though Anga was the only conquest of Bimbisara, he strengthened his position by matrimonial alliances with other kingdoms. His marriage with Kosala Devi, a sister of Prasenjit of Kosala, brought him the part of Kasi (Varanasi). He was also married to Chellana, the daughter of Chetaka, the Licchavis king of Vaishali. Another wife of Bimbisara was Khema who was born into the royal family of Madra in central Punjab. 

Bimbisara's capital was Raagriha, the modern Rajgir in the Nalanda district of Bihar.

An energetic ruler, Bimbisara did not tolerate inefficient officials who were summarily dismissed. He is credited with building roads and causeways for the benefits of his subjects.

Bimbisara was in diplomatic contact with Puskarasarin, the ruler of Gandhara, whose kingdom also included Taxila.

Bimbisara was deposed, imprisoned and murdered by his son Ajatashatru in about 494 B.C. 



                King Bimbisara visits Venuvana in Rajagriha |Wikimedia Commons

History Questions: Bengal Nawabs and the English

Q.1 The Battle of Plassey was fought in
(a) 1782
(b) 1757
(c) 1748
(d) 1764
Answer (b) 1757

Q. 2 Plassey is situated in which state of India?
(a) Bihar
(b) West Bengal
(c) Odisha
(d) Andhra Pradesh
Answer (b) West Bengal

Q. 3 Battle of Plassey was fought between
(a) Siraj-ud-Doula and British East India Company
(b) Mirzafar and British East India Company
(c) Mir Kasim and British East India Company
(d) Shuja-ud-daulah and British East India Company
Answer (a) Siraj-ud-Doula and British East India Company

Q. 4 Battle of Buxar was fought in
(a) 1764
(b) 1757
(c) 1748
(d) 1764
Answer (a) 1764

Q. 5 Buxar is situated in which state of India?
(a) Bihar
(b) West Bengal
(c) Odisha
(d) Andhra Pradesh
Answer (a) Bihar


Sunday, August 4, 2013

Charles Wilkins (1749-1836): Father of Indology



Charles Wilkins was a famous British scholar and Orientalist who played an important part in instilling interest in Oriental studies in the Europe. His claim to fame rests in being the first translator of Bhagavad Gita into English. Completed in 1784, this translation is considered the first direct one of a Sanskrit work into English. 

Charles Wilkins, an employee of the East India Company, learnt Sanskrit, Bengali and helped William Jones found the Asiatic Society of Bengal on 1st January, 1784.  In 1787, Wilkins translated Hitopadesha.

Veerashaivism of Basava


Veerashaivism or Lingayatism is one of the important Shaivite sects having its followers in the state of Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh. Veerashaivism was founded by Basava, a minister of King Bijjala Kalchuri who usurped the throne of Chalukyas of Kalyani in 1156. The theology of this sect is ‘qualified monism’. However, it is more famous for its social doctrines. Basava repudiated caste system instituted complete equality among his followers, opposed image worship, pilgrimage, sacrificial rituals. 

In Veerashaivism, the linga of Shiva is the only sacred symbol a small specimen of which is carried around the neck of the adherents. Here authority of the Vedas is rejected and the followers of either sex are allowed to remarry after the death of their spouses. 

Basava also condemned cremation of the dead and burial is the usual practice among its followers even today.

In recent years, orthodoxy has crept into Veerashaivism to some extent. The sacred literature of the sect is primarily composed in Kannada and Telugu.

Saturday, July 27, 2013

History Questions: Slave Dynasty

1. Which of the following Slave Sultans of Delhi Sultanate did not belong to Ilabari Tribe of Turks?
(a)   Qutbuddin Aibak
(b)   Iltutmish
(c)   Ghiyasuddin Balban
(d)   Nasiruddin Mahmud
Answer: Qutbuddin Aibak

2. Which Slave ruler called himself Naib-i-Khudai or Deputy of the God?
(a)   Iltutmish
(b)   Qutbuddin Aibak
(c)   Ghiyasuddin Balban
(d)   Kaiqubad
Answer: Ghiyasuddin Balban

3. Amir-i-Chahalgan or The Group of Forty was eliminated by?
(a)   ltutmish
(b)   Ghiyasuddin Balban
(c)   Razia
(d)   Qutbuddin Aibak
Answer: Ghiyasuddin Balban

4. Who among the following Slave Sultan was the first to issue regular currency?
(a)   Iltutmish
(b)   Ghiyasuddin Balban
(c)   Aram Shah
(d)   Razia
Answer: Iltutmish

5. Who was the first sovereign ruler of Delhi Sultanate?
(a)   Qutbuddin Aibak
(b)   Iltutmish
(c)   Razia
(d)   Kaiqubad
Answer: Iltutmish


History Questions: India's Freedom Struggle


        1.     Who defended Aurobindo Ghosh in the Alipur Bomb Conspiracy case?
               (a)   Womesh Chunder Bonnerjee
               (b)   Chittaranjan Das
               (c)   Motilal Nehru
               (d)   Tej Bahadur Sapru
   Answer: Chittaranjan Das

               2.     Dadabhai Naoroji entered the British House of Commons as a member of the …….. Party?
               (a)   Liberal
               (b)   Conservative
               (c)   Labour
(              (d)   Labour-Liberal combine
   Answer: Liberal

               3.     Who gave the title of Rani to the Naga woman leader Gaidinliu?
               (a)   Jawaharlal Nehru
               (b)   Subhash Chandra Bose
               (c)   Mahatma Gandhi
               (d)   Vallabh Bhai Patel
   Answer: Jawaharlal Nehru

               4.     Who was the founder President of Harijan Sevak Sangh, founded by Mahatma Gandhi?
               (a)   Amrit Lal Thakkar (Thakkar Bapa)
               (b)   B R Ambedkar
               (c)   Ghanshyam Das Birla
               (d)   K Satyamurti
  Answer: Ghanshyam Das Birla

              5.     In which city was Hindustan Socialist Republican Association founded in 1928?
              (a)   Allahabad
              (b)   Kanpur
              (c)   Lahore
              (d)   Delhi
  Answer: Kanpur

Cosmas Indicopleustes

World map by Cosmas Indicopleustes /  Image Credit: upload.wikimedia.org Cosmas Indicopleustes (literally: "who sailed to India") ...