Agrarian Economy – UGC NET History – Practice Questions

PRACTICE QUESTIONS UGC NET (HISTORY)

1. Agricultural Expansion & Crops in Early Medieval India

2. Landlords and Peasants in Early Medieval India

3. Water Resources

4. Taxation System in Early Medieval India

5. Early Medieval Indian Currency System

Agrarian Economy

UGC NET HISTORY (UNIT 3)

LANGUAGE
Table of Contents

Agricultural Expansion & Crops in Early Medieval India

1. The Early Medieval period in India is generally considered to extend from:
A) 3rd to 8th century CE
B) 5th to 10th century CE
C) 7th to 12th century CE
D) 10th to 15th century CE


2. One of the major characteristics of the early medieval economy in its initial phase was:
A) Rapid urbanization
B) Expansion of coinage
C) Decline in economic activities
D) Growth of international trade


3. The decayed condition of towns during the early medieval period was particularly noted in:
A) South India
B) Western India
C) Eastern India
D) Northern India


4. Which among the following indicated economic decline during the early medieval period?
A) Increase in maritime trade
B) Rise of merchant guilds
C) Absence of coins for exchange
D) Expansion of irrigation works


5. The revival of trade activities in the early medieval period was marked by:
A) Decline of towns
B) Decrease in agricultural output
C) Introduction of new gold coins
D) End of sea trade


6. Which of the following contributed to the revival of economic activities in the early medieval period?
A) Agricultural expansion through land grants
B) Arab participation in maritime trade
C) Surplus production of goods
D) All of the above

Correct Answer: D) All of the above


7. Arab traders established a foothold in Sind in:
A) 632 A.D.
B) 661 A.D.
C) 712 A.D.
D) 850 A.D.


8. Arab settlements stretched along maritime routes from:
A) Persia to Sri Lanka
B) Arabia to China
C) Gujarat to Java
D) Malabar to Egypt


9. Which South Indian dynasty maintained close commercial contacts with South-East Asia and China?
A) Pallavas
B) Rashtrakutas
C) Chalukyas
D) Cholas


10. Which among the following regions maintained commercial links with the Cholas?
A) Central Asia
B) Malaya and Indonesia
C) Arabia only
D) Tibet and Mongolia


11. The most important source material for the early medieval economy is:
A) Coins only
B) Foreign travelers’ accounts only
C) Inscriptions, especially copper plates
D) Literary epics only


12. Copper plates are also known as:
A) Shilalekhas
B) Rajapatras
C) Tamrapatta
D) Smritigranthas


13. Copper plate inscriptions mainly recorded:
A) Royal conquests
B) Marriage alliances
C) Revenue-free land grants
D) Foreign invasions


14. The practice of issuing land grants became firmly established from the:
A) 2nd century CE
B) 3rd century CE
C) 4th century CE
D) 8th century CE


15. Most copper plates recorded grants made primarily to:
A) Traders and artisans
B) Military officers only
C) Brahmanas and religious institutions
D) Village chiefs only


16. Copper plates are valuable sources for understanding:
A) Irrigation projects
B) Rural settlement patterns
C) Crops and agrarian taxes
D) All of the above

Correct Answer: D) All of the above


17. Merchants occasionally acted as witnesses to:
A) Coronation rituals
B) Judicial punishments
C) Land donations
D) Temple destruction


18. Sulka mentioned in inscriptions refers to:
A) Religious tax
B) Land tax
C) Military tax
D) Tolls and customs duties


19. Dharmashastras and Smritis provide information mainly regarding:
A) Temple rituals only
B) Trade and urban centres
C) Military administration only
D) Foreign invasions only


20. Which Smriti texts are useful for understanding early medieval trade and economy?
A) Arthashastra and Nitisara
B) Manusmriti and Yajnavalkyasmriti commentaries
C) Rajatarangini and Harshacharita
D) Puranas only


21. Amarakosa, a technical treatise, was written by:
A) Hemachandra
B) Kalidasa
C) Amarasimha
D) Dandin


22. Desinamamala was composed by:
A) Kalidasa
B) Sudraka
C) Bana
D) Hemachandra


23. Mrcchakatikam, a literary work reflecting commercial life, was composed by:
A) Kalidasa
B) Dandin
C) Sudraka
D) Vishakhadatta


24. Dasakumaracharita was written by:
A) Bana
B) Dandin
C) Kalhana
D) Hemachandra


25. Jagaducharita and Vastupalamahatmyam are biographies of premier merchants in:
A) Bengal
B) Tamil Nadu
C) Karnataka
D) Early medieval Gujarat


26. Which Chinese traveler’s account is important for understanding external trade in early medieval India?
A) Marco Polo
B) Ibn Battuta
C) Hsuan Tsang
D) Megasthenes


27. Which among the following Arabic-Persian scholars wrote about Indian commodities and trade?
A) Al-Masudi
B) Al-Biruni
C) Al-Idrisi
D) All of the above

Correct Answer: D) All of the above


28. Match List I with List II and select the correct answer.

List IList II
A. Amarakosa1. Amarasimha
B. Desinamamala2. Hemachandra
C. Mrcchakatikam3. Sudraka
D. Dasakumaracharita4. Dandin

A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2
A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1


29. Match List I with List II and select the correct answer.

List IList II
A. Fa-hsien1. Chinese traveler
B. Hsuan Tsang2. External trade account
C. Al-Biruni3. Arabic scholar
D. Marco Polo4. European traveler

A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1
A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2


30. Match List I with List II and select the correct answer.

List IList II
A. Sulka1. Toll/custom duty
B. Tamrapatta2. Copper plate
C. Brahmadeya3. Brahmana land grant
D. Devadana4. Temple land grant

A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1
A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2


31. Assertion (A): Early medieval India initially witnessed economic decline.
Reason (R): Coinage and urban centres weakened in many regions.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


32. Assertion (A): Arab traders played no role in India’s maritime economy.
Reason (R): Arab settlements became channels for Indian external trade.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


33. Assertion (A): Copper plate inscriptions mainly recorded military conquests.
Reason (R): They generally documented land grants and revenue transfers.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


34. Assertion (A): Chola rulers maintained commercial relations with China and South-East Asia.
Reason (R): Maritime trade expanded significantly under the Cholas.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


35. Assertion (A): Smriti literature is irrelevant for studying the early medieval economy.
Reason (R): Manusmriti and Yajnavalkyasmriti contain references to trade and towns.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


36. Assertion (A): Gupta gold coins continued unchanged throughout the early medieval period.
Reason (R): New gold coinage emerged after 1000 A.D.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


37. Assertion (A): Archaeological data on early medieval urbanization is abundant.
Reason (R): Systematic excavation of settlements has been inadequate.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


38. Assertion (A): Merchants occasionally contributed cesses on goods to temples and deities.
Reason (R): Merchants actively participated in religious donations.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


39. Agrarian expansion in the early medieval period began mainly through:
A) Coin circulation
B) Military conquest
C) Brahmadeya and Agrahara settlements
D) Merchant guilds


40. Land grants to Brahmanas started significantly from the:
A) 2nd century CE
B) 3rd century CE
C) 5th century CE
D) 9th century CE


41. Between the 8th and 12th centuries, agrarian expansion was based largely on grants to:
A) Merchants only
B) Peasants only
C) Religious and secular beneficiaries
D) Foreign traders only


42. A major feature of early medieval agricultural expansion was:
A) Decline of irrigation
B) Clearing forests and cultivation of virgin land
C) Urban migration
D) Reduction of settlements


43. Match List I with List II and select the correct answer.

List IList II
A. 4th–5th centuries1. Central India, Deccan, Andhra
B. 5th–7th centuries2. Bengal and Odisha
C. 7th–8th centuries3. Tamil Nadu and Karnataka
D. 9th century4. Kerala

A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1
A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2


44. Match List I with List II and select the correct answer.

List IList II
A. Dana1. Gift
B. Punya2. Merit
C. Pataka3. Sin
D. Devadana4. Temple grant

A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1
A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2


45. Assertion (A): Agrarian expansion displayed regional variations.
Reason (R): Geographical and ecological conditions differed across India.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


46. Assertion (A): Land grants were confined only to backward tribal regions.
Reason (R): Grants were also made in settled agricultural zones to integrate them into a new economic order.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


47. Assertion (A): Dana was considered ideologically significant in post-Gupta India.
Reason (R): Giving land to Brahmanas was regarded as a means to gain religious merit.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


48. Assertion (A): Temple institutions became increasingly important in agrarian organization after the 8th century.
Reason (R): Temple grants (devadanas) became central to agricultural expansion.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


49. Which among the following gifts was considered the best in Dharmashastric ideology?
A) Gift of gold
B) Gift of paddy
C) Gift of cattle
D) Gift of land to learned Brahmanas


50. The approximate spread of land grants across most of the Indian subcontinent was completed by:
A) 8th century
B) 10th century
C) End of the 12th century
D) 15th century


51. Brahmadeya refers to:
A) Tax collected from merchants
B) Land grants made to Brahmanas
C) Temple tax exemption
D) Village assembly of peasants


52. Agrahara settlements were primarily associated with:
A) Military officers
B) Merchant guilds
C) Brahmana settlements and land control
D) Tribal chiefs


53. One major objective of brahmadeya grants was to:
A) Promote maritime trade
B) Establish military camps
C) Bring virgin land under cultivation
D) Encourage urbanization


54. Brahmanas played a significant role in early medieval agrarian society by:
A) Leading military expeditions only
B) Integrating socio-economic groups through caste and service tenures
C) Restricting cultivation entirely
D) Eliminating irrigation systems


55. Land grants in the early medieval period were initiated mainly by:
A) Guild organizations
B) Foreign merchants
C) Ruling dynasties and later chiefs/feudatories
D) Village peasants only


56. Brahmadeya villages were often exempted from taxes for:
A) 2 years
B) 5 years
C) 12 years
D) Permanent exemption without condition


57. Privileges attached to land grants were known as:
A) Bhaga
B) Sulka
C) Pariharas
D) Dana


58. Brahmadeya settlements were generally established near:
A) Military camps
B) Mines
C) Coastal ports
D) Major irrigation works like tanks and lakes


59. Which of the following features was usually specified in land grant charters?
A) Village boundaries
B) Type of land and crops
C) Wet, dry, and garden lands
D) All of the above

Correct Answer: D) All of the above


60. Along with land revenues, who were often transferred to the donees?
A) Soldiers only
B) Merchants only
C) Peasants, artisans, and inhabitants
D) Monks only


61. In Brahmadeya settlements, Brahmanas often acted as:
A) Temple dancers
B) Managers of agricultural and artisanal production
C) Military generals only
D) Maritime traders


62. Secular land grants to government officers gained momentum particularly in the:
A) Mauryan period
B) Kushana period
C) Gupta period only
D) Post-Gupta period


63. According to Manusmriti, grants to state officials are mentioned as early as:
A) 100 BCE
B) 200 C.E.
C) 500 C.E.
D) 800 C.E.


64. State officers receiving secular grants formed:
A) Monastic communities
B) A new class of landlords
C) Tribal federations
D) Merchant councils


65. Which among the following regions witnessed land grants to officers during the 10th–12th centuries?
A) Rajasthan and Gujarat
B) Bihar and Bengal
C) Central India
D) All of the above

Correct Answer: D) All of the above


66. Devadana refers to:
A) Tax-free grants to merchants
B) Military service grants
C) Land grants to religious establishments or temples
D) Trade guild taxes


67. Temple lands in devadana settlements were usually cultivated by:
A) Brahmana priests only
B) Kings personally
C) Tenant cultivators paying produce share
D) Merchant guilds exclusively


68. In Tamil Nadu, temple lands were often administered by:
A) Rajputs
B) Brahmanas alone
C) Velalas
D) Arab traders


69. In Karnataka, temple lands were administered by:
A) Gavundas exclusively
B) Rajgurus
C) Okkalu Kampulu
D) Buddhist monks


70. Temples in early medieval India helped integrate peasant and tribal settlements mainly through:
A) Maritime trade
B) Acculturation and service tenures
C) Coin minting
D) Judicial warfare


71. Which social groups were generally excluded from temple space and assigned to fringes of settlements?
A) Kings and nobles
B) Brahmanas
C) Merchants
D) Lower castes and untouchables


72. The new landed elite in early medieval India included:
A) Clan chiefs
B) Families with kani rights
C) Heads of kinship groups
D) All of the above

Correct Answer: D) All of the above


73. Kani rights primarily referred to:
A) Royal military privileges
B) Tax exemptions for merchants
C) Rights of possession and supervision over land
D) Temple worship privileges


74. One major consequence of land grants was the emergence of:
A) Urban republics
B) Buddhist sanghas
C) Intermediary strata between king and peasants
D) Democratic assemblies only


75. The major source of state revenue in early medieval India was:
A) Customs duty only
B) Guild tax only
C) Land tax
D) Port tax only


76. Match List I with List II and select the correct answer.

List IList II
A. Brahmadeya1. Grant to Brahmanas
B. Agrahara2. Brahmana settlement
C. Devadana3. Temple grant
D. Pariharas4. Privileges/exemptions

A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1
A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2


77. Match List I with List II and select the correct answer.

List IList II
A. Velalas1. Tamil Nadu
B. Okkalu Kampulu2. Karnataka
C. Kani rights3. Possession rights
D. Pariharas4. Tax privileges

A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1
A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2


78. Match List I with List II and select the correct answer.

List IList II
A. Ministers1. Secular grantees
B. Military servants2. Land grants
C. Brahmanas3. Religious beneficiaries
D. Temples4. Agricultural nuclei

A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1
A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2


79. Assertion (A): Brahmadeya grants aimed at integrating settlements into a new agrarian order.
Reason (R): Brahmana proprietors supervised agriculture and social organization.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


80. Assertion (A): Land grants to secular officials declined after the Gupta period.
Reason (R): Post-Gupta states increasingly remunerated officers through land grants.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


81. Assertion (A): Temples had no role in agrarian integration.
Reason (R): Temples helped integrate peasant and tribal groups through service systems.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


82. Assertion (A): Peasants and artisans were sometimes transferred with land grants.
Reason (R): Land grants included control over production and labor.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


83. Assertion (A): Temple lands in South India were always supervised only by Brahmanas.
Reason (R): Non-Brahmana elites like Velalas also managed temple lands.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


84. Assertion (A): The emergence of landed intermediaries transformed rural society.
Reason (R): New strata emerged between the king and actual cultivators.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


85. Assertion (A): Temple grants in South India are known as devadanas.
Reason (R): Temples became increasingly central to agrarian organization after the eighth century.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


86. Assertion (A): Land grants benefited only Brahmanas in the early medieval period.
Reason (R): Secular officers and military personnel also received grants.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


87. Taxes theoretically payable to the king came to be transferred to:
A) Merchant guilds
B) Village assemblies only
C) Land grantees
D) Foreign traders


88. Fiscal exemptions mentioned in copper plate grants are known as:
A) Sulka
B) Dana
C) Bhaga
D) Pariharas


89. Dharmashastras helped justify:
A) Merchant monopolies
B) Village autonomy only
C) Royal ownership of land and grants
D) Temple destruction


90. Evidence from early medieval India suggests the emergence of:
A) Pure communal ownership only
B) No ownership rights
C) Private ownership of land
D) State monopoly over land without transfer


91. Grantees often enjoyed rights of:
A) Tax exemption only
B) Cultivation only
C) Alienation and hereditary transfer of land
D) Military recruitment only


92. Which among the following contributed to hereditary ownership of land?
A) Religious grants
B) Secular grants
C) Purchase from private individuals
D) All of the above

Correct Answer: D) All of the above


93. Match List I with List II and select the correct answer.

List IList II
A. Parihara1. Fiscal exemption
B. Bhaga2. Land tax
C. Alienation rights3. Land transfer
D. Kani rights4. Possession rights

A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1
A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2


94. Assertion (A): Land rights in early medieval India remained entirely communal.
Reason (R): Evidence points toward emergence of private and hereditary ownership.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


95. Assertion (A): Pariharas meant complete abolition of taxes.
Reason (R): Taxes were transferred to grantees rather than entirely abolished.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


96. Assertion (A): Grantees enjoyed hereditary privileges in settlements.
Reason (R): Land gifts increasingly developed hereditary rights in land.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


97. Assertion (A): Dharmashastras rejected royal ownership of land.
Reason (R): Law books sanctioned land grants and intermediary rights.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


98. Irrigation tanks in South India are often referred to as:
A) Pushkarini only
B) Eri or Tataka
C) Kupa
D) Vapi


99. Step wells popular in Rajasthan and Gujarat were called:
A) Pushkarini
B) Kupa
C) Vapi
D) Ghatiyantra


100. Wells mentioned in inscriptions are referred to as:
A) Sulka
B) Bhaga
C) Kupa/Kinaru
D) Agrahara


101. Which among the following irrigation structures became increasingly important during the early medieval period?
A) Canals only
B) Tanks and lakes only
C) Wells only
D) Canals, lakes, tanks, and wells

Correct Answer: D) Canals, lakes, tanks, and wells


102. In south Karnataka, irrigation tanks were commonly known as:
A) Pushkarini
B) Tataka
C) Keres
D) Vapi


103. In Bengal, the term pushkarini referred to:
A) River embankment
B) Tank or water reservoir
C) Irrigation tax
D) Water-lifting machine


104. Araghatta-wells were especially important in:
A) Bengal
B) Odisha
C) Tamil Nadu
D) Western Rajasthan


105. Water access significantly contributed to:
A) Urban decline
B) Reduced cultivation
C) Expansion and intensification of agriculture
D) Elimination of settlements


106. Water-lifts using human and animal power are recorded in inscriptions between:
A) 2nd–5th centuries CE
B) 5th–7th centuries CE
C) 8th–13th centuries CE
D) 14th–16th centuries CE


107. Step wells (vapis) became especially popular between the:
A) 7th–9th centuries
B) 8th–10th centuries
C) 11th–13th centuries
D) 14th–15th centuries


108. One major reason for the increase in irrigation works during the early medieval period was:
A) Foreign invasions
B) Technological advancements in irrigation
C) Decline in agriculture
D) Coin shortage


109. Flood management techniques included:
A) Canal construction only
B) River damming only
C) Mud embankments only
D) Breaching rivers, canals, and embankments

Correct Answer: D) Breaching rivers, canals, and embankments


110. Lakes and reservoirs were especially common in:
A) Desert-free regions only
B) Forest zones alone
C) Semi-arid and rain-fed regions
D) Urban port cities


111. Royal permission for digging tanks and wells was particularly necessary when grants were made to:
A) Traders only
B) Guilds only
C) Brahmanas and temples
D) Foreign settlers


112. Construction and maintenance of tanks and canals were considered:
A) Military obligations
B) Commercial investments only
C) Acts of religious merit
D) Royal punishments


113. Which inscription from Ajmer refers to the use of a “big” plough?
A) 7th-century inscription
B) 8th-century inscription
C) 9th-century inscription
D) 10th-century inscription


114. Which among the following water-lifting devices is mentioned in inscriptions and literary works?
A) Sulka
B) Parihara
C) Araghatta and Ghatiyantra
D) Tataka


115. Gurusamhita and Krishinarashwara are important for understanding:
A) Maritime trade
B) Temple architecture
C) Weather knowledge and agriculture
D) Judicial administration


116. Agricultural texts mention more than ______ types of cereals.
A) 20
B) 50
C) 75
D) 100


117. According to Shunyapurana, Bengal had more than ______ varieties of paddy.
A) 20
B) 35
C) 50
D) 100


118. Which among the following became important cash crops during the early medieval period?
A) Cotton
B) Sugarcane
C) Areca nuts and betel leaves
D) All of the above

Correct Answer: D) All of the above


119. Rajashekhara (early 10th century) praised excellent sugarcane from:
A) Gujarat
B) Punjab
C) North Bengal
D) Kashmir


120. Marco Polo noted a high demand in China and Europe for:
A) Rice and wheat
B) Iron and copper
C) Pepper and ginger
D) Cotton and wool only


121. Which agricultural practice became widespread during the early medieval period?
A) Mono-cropping
B) Hunting cultivation
C) Crop rotation and three harvests per year
D) Nomadic agriculture


122. The spread of advanced agricultural technology across India led to:
A) Agricultural decline
B) Urban collapse
C) Increase in agricultural production
D) Elimination of markets


123. Match List I with List II and select the correct answer.

List IList II
A. Keres1. South Karnataka tanks
B. Pushkarini2. Tank in Bengal
C. Araghatta3. Water-lifting device
D. Vapi4. Step well

A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1
A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2


124. Match List I with List II and select the correct answer.

List IList II
A. Gurusamhita1. Agricultural/weather knowledge
B. Shunyapurana2. Bengal paddy varieties
C. Rajashekhara3. Sugarcane in north Bengal
D. Marco Polo4. Spice demand

A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1
A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2


125. Match List I with List II and select the correct answer.

List IList II
A. Tataka1. Tank
B. Kupa2. Well
C. Ghatiyantra3. Water-lifting device
D. Srota4. Water channel

A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1
A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2


126. Assertion (A): Water management played an important role in agrarian expansion.
Reason (R): Irrigation systems expanded and intensified cultivation.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


127. Assertion (A): Irrigation tanks were absent in South India.
Reason (R): Tanks like eri and keres expanded significantly in this period.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


128. Assertion (A): Crop diversification increased in the early medieval agrarian economy.
Reason (R): Texts mention multiple cereals, cash crops, and improved fertilizers.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


129. Assertion (A): Step wells became important irrigation structures in Rajasthan and Gujarat.
Reason (R): Vapis supplied irrigation and drinking water.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


130. Assertion (A): Early medieval agriculture remained technologically stagnant.
Reason (R): New irrigation devices and advanced cultivation techniques were introduced.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


131. Assertion (A): Private individuals also participated in irrigation development.
Reason (R): Individuals invested in tank construction as acts of merit.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


132. Assertion (A): Marco Polo described low demand for Indian spices in Europe.
Reason (R): Pepper and ginger were in great demand in China and Europe.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


133. Rural society during agrarian expansion was:
A) Completely homogeneous
B) Tribal and unstructured
C) Heterogeneous and stratified
D) Entirely urbanized


134. Which of the following categories of cultivators emerged in the early medieval period?
A) Kshetrik
B) Karshaka
C) Halin and Ardhik
D) All of the above

Correct Answer: D) All of the above


135. Unlike pre-Gupta gahapatis, the new agrarian categories mainly referred to:
A) Urban merchants
B) Military officers
C) Different categories of cultivators
D) Temple priests only


136. The Damara revolts occurred in:
A) Bengal
B) Tamil Nadu
C) Kashmir
D) Gujarat


137. The Kaivartha rebellion took place in Bengal under:
A) Dharmapala
B) Gopala
C) Ramapala
D) Mahipala I


138. Acts of self-immolation in Tamil Nadu were associated with:
A) Foreign invasions
B) Maritime disputes
C) Land encroachments
D) Temple destruction


139. In Pandya territory, one sign of rural tension was:
A) Brahmana revolts
B) Appropriation of donated land by Shudras
C) End of temple grants
D) Merchant rebellions


140. Hero-stones around agraharas may provide evidence of:
A) Maritime trade
B) Temple festivals
C) Rural tensions and conflicts
D) Coin circulation


141. The growing importance of brahmahatya in early medieval India suggests:
A) Harmony between peasants and Brahmanas
B) Tensions involving Brahmanas and agrarian society
C) Decline of land grants
D) Absence of rural conflict


142. Donors often preferred land where:
A) Foreign merchants lived
B) Ports were nearby
C) Agrarian disputes were absent
D) Forests remained uncleared


143. Match List I with List II and select the correct answer.

List IList II
A. Damara revolt1. Kashmir
B. Kaivartha rebellion2. Bengal
C. Ramapala3. Pala ruler
D. Brahmahatya4. Killing of a Brahmana

A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1
A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2


144. Match List I with List II and select the correct answer.

List IList II
A. Kshetrik1. Cultivator category
B. Halin2. Agricultural worker
C. Ardhik3. Sharecropper
D. Gahapati4. Pre-Gupta landholder

A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1
A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2


145. Assertion (A): Rural society became socially stratified during agrarian expansion.
Reason (R): New intermediary groups and cultivator categories emerged.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


146. Assertion (A): The Kaivartha rebellion reflects agrarian discontent.
Reason (R): New landed intermediaries generated tensions in rural society.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


147. Assertion (A): Hero-stones near agraharas suggest a conflict-free agrarian order.
Reason (R): Such evidence may reveal underlying social tensions.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


148. Assertion (A): Brahmadeya expansion always produced harmonious peasant relations.
Reason (R): Evidence suggests distrust toward landed intermediaries in some areas.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


149. Assertion (A): Rural tension existed only between Brahmanas and peasants.
Reason (R): Conflicts also occurred among secular landholders and temples.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


150. The early medieval agrarian economy initially remained:
A) Highly monetized and export-driven
B) Industrially organized
C) Predominantly self-sufficient and survival-oriented
D) Entirely dependent on sea trade


151. In the early medieval agrarian economy, craftsmen and artisans were generally:
A) Independent entrepreneurs driven by markets
B) State-appointed officials
C) Attached to villages, estates, or religious establishments
D) Maritime traders


152. The role of traders and middlemen between 300–800 C.E. was generally:
A) Dominant in the economy
B) Central to market integration
C) Limited and supplementary
D) Entirely absent


153. Traders in the early medieval rural economy mainly supplied:
A) Horses and elephants
B) Foreign luxury goods only
C) Iron tools, oil, spices, and cloth
D) Gold coins exclusively


154. Market organization during the period between 300–800 C.E. can best be described as:
A) Highly advanced
B) Internationally integrated
C) Limited in scope
D) Completely absent


155. From the ______ century onward, local markets increased rapidly due to agrarian expansion.
A) 5th century
B) 7th century
C) 9th century
D) 12th century


156. The rise of local markets in the early medieval period initially served:
A) International trade only
B) Religious functions exclusively
C) Local exchange of goods
D) Military recruitment


157. Which factor encouraged the development of organized commerce in early medieval India?
A) Decline in agriculture
B) Need for regular trade within and between regions
C) Abolition of taxes
D) Disappearance of guilds


158. The growth of itinerant trade during the early medieval period was accompanied by:
A) Decline in exchange systems
B) Partial monetization of the economy
C) Total barter economy
D) Elimination of merchant groups


159. The growing importance of agriculture in the economy became evident because:
A) Agricultural products entered exchange networks
B) Trade goods circulated across regions
C) Agrarian surplus linked with long-distance trade
D) All of the above

Correct Answer: D) All of the above


160. Which occupational groups increasingly invested in land ownership?
A) Soldiers only
B) Temple priests only
C) Merchants and economically influential craftsmen
D) Foreign traders only


161. Jagati-kottali mentioned in inscriptions refers mainly to:
A) Merchant guild leaders
B) Temple priests
C) Weavers
D) Tax collectors


162. Telligas were associated primarily with:
A) Salt production
B) Maritime trade
C) Oil pressing
D) Horse trade


163. Weavers and oil pressers participated in agriculture through:
A) Coin minting
B) Military administration
C) Tank excavation and laying gardens
D) Judicial administration


164. The theory of Indian Feudalism is primarily associated with:
A) Burton Stein
B) Hermann Kulke
C) R.S. Sharma and D.D. Kosambi
D) Nilakanta Sastri


165. Indian Feudalism is characterized by:
A) Complete urbanization
B) Egalitarian land ownership
C) Hierarchical landed intermediaries
D) Elimination of vassalage


166. Sub-infeudation in early medieval India resulted in:
A) Uniform peasantry
B) End of intermediary classes
C) Creation of different landed strata
D) Elimination of taxation


167. Which among the following reflected the hierarchy of early medieval agrarian society?
A) Landed aristocrats
B) Sharecroppers and tenants
C) Cultivators
D) All of the above

Correct Answer: D) All of the above


168. The lord-vassal relationship in Indian feudalism resembled:
A) Republican assemblies
B) Tribal kinship only
C) Administrative and power hierarchies
D) Merchant guilds exclusively


169. Forced labour in early medieval India was called:
A) Dana
B) Sulka
C) Vishti
D) Bhaga


170. Initially, vishti was primarily a:
A) Merchant obligation
B) Religious tax
C) Royal prerogative
D) Temple privilege


171. Later, forced labour (vishti) was exercised by:
A) Brahmanas
B) Land grantees
C) Village officials
D) All of the above

Correct Answer: D) All of the above


172. Chola inscriptions contain frequent references to:
A) Buddhist monasteries
B) Coin shortages
C) Forced labour obligations
D) Maritime piracy


173. Agricultural labourers in the feudal model are often described as:
A) Free peasants
B) Guild workers
C) Semi-serfs
D) Independent merchants


174. Peasants in the feudal interpretation increasingly became:
A) Royal ministers
B) Monastic heads
C) Tenants and sharecroppers
D) Maritime merchants


175. The rise of coercion and indebtedness among peasants contributed to:
A) Elite prosperity
B) Peasant subordination
C) Trade monopolies
D) Temple decline


176. According to the Indian Feudalism theory, village economy was:
A) Fully market-oriented
B) Internationally connected
C) Relatively closed and self-sufficient
D) Based only on barter


177. In the feudal model, peasants, artisans, and craftsmen were:
A) Free-moving groups
B) Independent investors
C) Attached to villages and controlled by land beneficiaries
D) Maritime communities


178. The theory of autonomous peasant communities is mainly based on:
A) Bengal sources
B) Gujarat inscriptions
C) South Indian sources
D) Persian accounts


179. Nadus in South India were primarily:
A) Urban municipalities
B) Temple guilds
C) Autonomous peasant regions
D) Military cantonments


180. Nadu assemblies in South India were organized around:
A) Merchant guilds only
B) Brahmana councils alone
C) Clan and kinship ties
D) Military alliances


181. Assemblies controlling nadus were known as:
A) Sabhas
B) Ur
C) Nattars
D) Pallis


182. In the nadu system, agricultural production was supervised mainly by:
A) Merchant guilds
B) Brahmana priests only
C) Velalas (dominant peasants)
D) Foreign settlers


183. Land grants in nadus were supervised with the consent of:
A) Kings alone
B) Merchant guilds only
C) Nattars
D) Temple dancers


184. According to the autonomous peasant community theory, rural economy emphasized:
A) Urban dependence
B) Maritime commerce
C) Rural self-sufficiency
D) Coin-based exchange only


185. Which of the following statements is correct regarding Brahmana–peasant relations in South India?
A) Brahmanas and peasants had no interaction
B) Brahmanas and dominant peasants often formed alliances
C) Peasants resisted every land grant
D) Brahmanas rejected agricultural production


186. Match List I with List II and select the correct answer.

List IList II
A. Jagati-kottali1. Weaver
B. Telliga2. Oil presser
C. Vishti3. Forced labour
D. Nattars4. Nadu assemblies

A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1
A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2


187. Match List I with List II and select the correct answer.

List IList II
A. Nadu1. Peasant region
B. Velala2. Dominant peasant
C. R.S. Sharma3. Indian Feudalism
D. Burton Stein4. Peasant community approach

A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1
A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2


188. Match List I with List II and select the correct answer.

List IList II
A. Semi-serf1. Agricultural labourer
B. Ardhika2. Sharecropper
C. Sub-infeudation3. Layered intermediaries
D. Self-sufficient village4. Feudal economy

A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4
A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3
A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1
A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2


189. Assertion (A): Traders and middlemen dominated the economy between 300–800 C.E.
Reason (R): Market organization remained limited during this period.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


190. Assertion (A): Agrarian surplus stimulated market development from the ninth century onward.
Reason (R): Local exchange gradually expanded into regional trade networks.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


191. Assertion (A): Indian Feudalism emphasizes hierarchical landed intermediaries.
Reason (R): Power and administration resembled a lord–vassal structure.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


192. Assertion (A): Vishti remained exclusively a royal privilege throughout the early medieval period.
Reason (R): Brahmanas, grantees, and local authorities later exercised forced labour rights.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


193. Assertion (A): The village economy in Indian Feudalism was relatively self-sufficient.
Reason (R): Peasants, artisans, and craftsmen were tied to villages and estates.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


194. Assertion (A): Nadus in South India functioned as autonomous peasant regions.
Reason (R): Nattars supervised land grants and agricultural production.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


195. Assertion (A): The autonomous peasant community theory rejects rural self-sufficiency.
Reason (R): It emphasizes self-sufficient peasant regions organized around nadus.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


196. Assertion (A): Velalas played an important role in agrarian administration in South India.
Reason (R): Dominant peasants helped supervise production and grants.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


197. Assertion (A): Indian Feudalism and autonomous peasant community theories present identical interpretations.
Reason (R): Both differ in explaining the structure of rural society and power relations.

A) Both A and R are true
B) A is true, but R is false
C) A is false, but R is true
D) Both A and R are false


198. Assertion (A): Merchant and artisan groups increasingly acquired landed interests.
Reason (R): Economic growth encouraged investment in agriculture and irrigation.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
B) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation
C) A is true, but R is false
D) A is false, but R is true


199. Which interpretation views early medieval agrarian economy as involving hierarchical intermediaries and coercion?
A) Autonomous peasant communities theory
B) Segmentary state model
C) Indian Feudalism theory
D) Oriental despotism theory


200. Which statement best characterizes the early medieval agrarian economy?
A) Purely feudal without regional variations
B) Entirely autonomous peasant-based economy
C) A complex agrarian structure explained through multiple historical models
D) Completely urban-commercial economy

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