Solutions

The Age of Industrialisation

Question 1.
The person who got people from village, ensured them jobs, helped them settle in cities and provided them money in times of need was known as: [CBSE 2011]?
  • Stapler
  • Fuller
  • Gomastha
  • Jobber

Answer: Jobber

Question 2.
Why did Manchester export to India decline after the First World War?
  • People were busy fighting the war
  • Factories closed down due to security problem
  • Factories and mills were busy producing goods to fulfill the need of army
  • Export trade was restricted by the government

Answer: Factories closed down due to security problem

Question 3.
Why were workers in England hostile to machines and new technology?
  • They did not know how to use these
  • They feared that they would lose their jobs and livelihood
  • The workers were too poor to buy new machines
  • They were scared of machines

Answer: They feared that they would lose their jobs and livelihood

Question 4.
Why were there frequent clashes between the gomastha and the weavers?
  • The weavers hated foreigners
  • The gomastha forced the weavers to sell goods at a dictated price
  • Gomasthas were outsiders without long term social link with the village
  • None of the above

Answer:Gomasthas were outsiders without long term social link with the village

Question 5.
which of the following trade did the early entrepreneurs make a fortune?
  • Textile trade
  • China trade
  • Trade in tea
  • Industries

Answer: China trade

Question 6.
Which of the following was a European managing agency?
  • Tata Iron and Steel Company
  • Andrew Yule
  • Elgin Mill
  • Birla industries

Answer: Andrew Yule

Question 7.
Why did the weavers suffer from a problem of raw cotton?
  • The cotton crop perished
  • Raw cotton exports increased
  • Local markets shrank
  • Export market collapsed

Answer: Raw cotton exports increased

Question 8.
In Victorian Britain the upper classes- aristocratic class and bourgeoisie preferred handmade goods because?
  • they were made from imported material
  • the handmade goods came to symbolize refinement and class
  • they were better finished
  • only upper class could afford the expensive items

Answer: they were made from imported material

Question 9.
19th century why did the British manufacturers print calendars for advertisements?
  • Indian people were fond of using calendars in their houses
  • Unlike newspapers and magazines, calendars were used even by people who did not know how to read or write
  • It was cheaper to advertise goods through calendars
  • It used to add beauty to the room

Answer: Unlike newspapers and magazines, calendars were used even by people who did not know how to read or write

Question 10.
innovations helped the weavers in increasing productivity and compete with mill sector?
  • Spining jenny
  • Fly shuttle
  • Cotton Gin
  • Roller

Answer: Fly shuttle

Question 11.
In the 17th century, merchants from towns in Europe moved to the countryside to?
  • supply money to peasants and artisans to persuade them to produce for international markets
  • persuade them to settle in towns
  • provide them with small workshops
  • stop them from working for other companies

Answer: supply money to peasants and artisans to persuade them to produce for international markets

Question 12.
Name the first industrial country in the world?
  • France
  • Japan
  • Britain
  • Germany

Answer: Japan

Question 13.
Why couldnt the merchants expand production within towns?
  • The powerful guilds did not allow them to do so
  • New merchants were not competent enough to carry on production work and trade
  • New merchants had inadequate capital
  • Competent weavers and artisans were not available in towns

Answer: The powerful guilds did not allow them to do so

Question 14.
Where was the first cotton mill established?
  • Bombay
  • Ahmedabad
  • Kanpur
  • Madras

Answer: Bombay

Question 15.
Who devised the Spinning Jenny?
  • James Hargreaves
  • James Watt
  • Richard Arkwright
  • Samuel Luke

Answer: James Hargreaves

Question 16.
How did urban merchants acquire trade monopoly?
  • The old merchants had won over the weavers and artisans
  • The powerful members of the guilds had bribed the rulers
  • The rulers granted different guilds the monopoly right and trade of specific products
  • The guilds were so powerful that they did not allow new merchants to enter into the field of trade

Answer: The rulers granted different guilds the monopoly right and trade of specific products

Question 17.
Indian industrial growth increased after First World War because?
  • British opened new factories in India
  • New technological changes occurred
  • Indian mills now had a vast home market to supply to
  • India became independent

Answer: Indian mills now had a vast home market to supply to

Question 18.
Which of the following helped the production of handloom cloth?
  • Imposition of export duties
  • Technological changes
  • Government regulations
  • Import duties

Answer: Government regulations

Question 19.
Why was it difficult to get a job in a factory in 19th century Britain?
  • Employers were looking for only skilled workers and they rejected inexperienced applicants
  • The number of jobs were less than the number of job seekers
  • Employers did not prefer migrants
  • Employers wanted educated workers

Answer: The number of jobs were less than the number of job seekers

Question 20.
What made workers become hostile to the Spinning Jenny?
  • Common people had not yet accepted machine-made products
  • To some people machines appeared as monsters
  • It had reduced the demand for labour
  • Hand-made goods were still popular

Answer: It had reduced the demand for labour

Question 21.
Which of the following is not a reason why industrialists in 19th century Europe preferred hand labour over machines?
  • There was abundance of labour, so wages were low
  • Hand labour produced uniform and standardised goods for a mass market
  • Machines required huge capital investment
  • Industries, where demand was seasonal, industrialists preferred hand labour

Answer: Hand labour produced uniform and standardised goods for a mass market

Question 22.
After 1940s, building activity opened up greater opportunities of employment. What kind of work was introduced?
  • Construction of big business houses
  • Construction of mills and factories
  • Construction of railway lines, railway stations and digging up of tunnels
  • Construction of cinema halls for entertainment

Answer: Construction of railway lines railway stations and digging up of tunnels

Question 23.
Coarser cotton was produced in many countries but finer varieties came from?
  • Persia
  • India
  • China
  • Surinam

Answer: India

Question 24.
With the growth of colonial power, trade through the new ports of Bombay and Calcutta came to be controlled by?
  • Indian merchants
  • European companies
  • The East India Company
  • British Parliament

Answer: European companies

Question 25.
Identify the incorrect option. Early entrepreneur of India?
  • Dwarkanath Tagore of Bengal
  • Seth Hukumchand of Calcutta
  • Bhai Bhosle of Bombay
  • Dinshaw Petit and Jamsetjee . Nusserwanjee-Parsis of Bombay

Answer: Bhai Bhosle of Bombay

Question 26.
How did the mill owners organize the recruitment of workers? Choose the correct answer from the list given below?
  • They were recruited through tests/ examinations
  • Selection boards used to be set up
  • Owners employed through jobbers (very often the jobber was an old trustworthy worker)
  • Family members of the owners were recruited

Answer: Owners employed through jobbers (very often the jobber was an old trustworthy worker

Question 27.
Why did the weavers suffer from a problem of raw cotton?
  • Raw cotton exports increased
  • The cotton crop perished
  • Local markets shrank
  • Export market collapsed

Answer: Raw cotton exports increased

Question 28.
Name the most dynamic industry in Britain?
  • Food processing
  • Leather goods production
  • Cotton and metal industries
  • Electronic goods production

Answer: Cotton and metal industries

Question 29.
How did the East India Company prevent the Indian weavers from dealing with other companies?
  • Paid higher prices for their products
  • Bought them off as slaves
  • Offered them loans for their production
  • Imposed extra tarrif to discourage them to deal with other foreigners

Answer: Offered them loans for their production

Question 30.
Which war materials were produced in India to supply to Britain during World War I?
  • Gunpowder, cannons and other ammunition
  • Jute bags, cloth for army uniforms, tents and leather boots
  • Medicines for the wounded soldiers
  • Hammers, axes and other building material

Answer: Jute bags, cloth for army uniforms, tents and leather boots

Question 31.
Guilds were associations of ---------?

Answer: traders

Question 32.
--------- was a mechanical device used for weaving?

Answer: Fly shuttle

Question 33.
Manchester in England was well-known for ---------?

Answer:textile production

Question 34.
The yam produced in Indian industries was exported to ---------?

Answer:China

Question 35.
The expansion of railways boosted the growth of --------- and --------- industries?

Answer:iron and steel

Question 36.
In Bengal, Dwarakanath Tagore made his fortune in China Trade. (True/False)?

Answer:True

Question 37.
G.D. Birla was a Parsi entrepreneur who built huge industrial empire in India. (True/False)?

Answer: False

Question 38.
Advertisements make the products appear desirable and necessary. (True/False)?

Answer:True

Question 39.
When there is plenty of labour, wages are low. (True/False)?

Answer:True

Question 40.
In European society, members of the royal family are referred as bourgeoisie. (True/False)?

Answer:False

41. Match the columns?
(iv) James Hargreaves
Column A Column B
  • Gomasthas
  • (i) Seth Hukumchand
  • Spinning Jenny
  • (ii) Official who acted as company agent
  • Steam engine
  • (iii) Richard Arkwright
  • Cotton mill
  • First Indian jute mill
  • James Watt
    Answer:
    • (ii)
    • (iv)
    • (v)
    • (iii)
    • (i)
    Question 42.
    What is proto-industrialisation?

    Answer:Proto-industrialisation refers to the early phase of industrialisation in Europe and England where production was mainly done by hands

    Question 43.
    Why the merchants from towns in Europe began to move countryside in seventeenth and eighteenth centuries? [CBSE 2018]?

    Answer:To engage the peasants and artisans to produce goods for an international market

    Question 44.
    What were the factors that led to an increased demand for goods?

    Answer:Expansion of trade and acquisition of colonies in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries led to an increasing demand for goods

    Question 45.
    What were trade guilds?

    Answer:Associations of traders and merchants that trained crafts people, maintained control over production and regulated prices

    Question 46. Who is a stapler?

    Answer:A stapler is a person who sorts wool according to its fibre

    Question 47.
    Define Fuller?

    Answer:A person who fulls or gathers a cloth by pleating is known as fuller

    Question 48.
    Which city was known as finishing centre?

    Answer:Explanation: London

    Question 49.
    What was the first symbol of the new era in England in the late 18th century?

    Answer:Cotton became the first symbol of the new era in England in the late 18th century

    Question 50.
    Define Carding?

    Answer:Carding is a process in which fibres, such as cotton or wool, are prepared before spinning

    Question 51.
    Who created the first cotton mill?

    Answer: Richard Arkwright

    Question 52.
    Which industries were the dynamic indus-tries of England during its earliest phase of industrialisation?

    Answer:Cotton and Iron and steel industries

    Question 53.
    Name any two non-mechanised sectors where ordinary and small innovations formed the basis of growth?

    Answer:Food processing, building, pottery, glass work tanning, furniture making and production of implements. (any two)

    Question 54.
    Who improved upon the steam engine produced by Newcomen?

    Answer:James Watt

    Question 55.
    Who was regarded as the typical-worker in the mid-nineteenth century?

    Answer:A traditional craftsperson and labourer who did not operate machines

    Question 56.
    Why did industrialists in Victorian Britain not want to introduce machines?

    Answer:Machines reduced the requirement of human labour and inferred large capital investment

    Question 57.
    Name the areas that demanded seasonal labour in England?

    Answer: Gas works, breweries and dockyards

    Question 58.
    Why did the American industrialists favour the use of mechanical power for production in nineteenth century?

    Answer:Because countries like America had shortage of labour

    Question 59.
    Who invented the Spinning Jenny? [CBSE 2013]?

    Answer:James Hargreaves

    Question 60.
    Name the Indian goods that dominated the Indian market before the age of machine industries?

    Answer:Silk and cotton

    Question 60.
    Name the Indian goods that dominated the Indian market before the age of machine industries?

    Answer: Silk and cotton

    Question 61.
    Name an eminent pre-colonial port?
    Year of Question :(2017 )

    Answer:Surat

    Question 62.
    To which ports did Surat on the Gujarat coast connect India?
    Year of Question :(2017 )

    Answer:Surat connected India to the Gulf and Red Sea Ports

    Question 63.
    Mention the reason for the decline of the preĀ¬colonial ports i.e. Surat and Masulipatnam by the 1750?
    Year of Question :(2010 )

    Answer:The European companies became powerful by securing a variety of concessions from local courts and the monopoly rights to trade. Leading to the decline of the pre-colonial ports i.e. Surat and Masulipatnam

    Question 64.
    Name two new ports which grew in importance after the decline of Surat and Hooghly?
    Year of Question :(2019 )

    Answer: Bombay and Calcutta

    Question 65.
    Why was East India Company keen on expanding textile exports from India?
    Year of Question :(2018 )

    Answer:British cotton industries had not yet expanded and the Indian textiles were in great demand in Europe

    Question 66.
    What is the monopoly of trade?
    Year of Question :(2019 )

    Answer:Monopoly of trade is the practice in which a country develops a system of management and control, eliminating competition, control costs, ensure regulated supply of products

    Question 67.
    Why did the East India Company appoint Gomasthas?
    Year of Question :(2018 )

    Answer:To supervise weavers, collect supplies and examine the quality of cloth

    Question 68.
    Who was Henry Patullo? What did he say about the Indian textiles?
    Year of Question :(2015 )

    Answer:Henry Patullo was an East India Company official. He said that demand for Indian textile could never reduce, because no country produced goods of the same quality

    Question 69.
    Why did Britain turn to India for cotton supplies by 1860s?
    Year of Question :(2017 )

    Answer:Britain turned to India for cotton supplies by 1860s as American civil war cut off the cotton supplies from US

    Question 70.
    What was China trade?
    Year of Question :(2009 )

    Answer:The British in India began exporting opium to China and took tea from China to England. Many Indians participated in this trade, provided finance, procuring supplies and shipping consignments. It- was called China trade

    Question 71.
    Who set up six joint stock companies in Bengal?
    Year of Question :(2018 )

    Answer: Dwarkanath Tagore

    Question 72.
    How did fly shuttle increase handloom cloth production in the 20th century?
    Year of Question :(2019 )

    Answer:It helped weavers to operate large looms and weave large pieces of cloth that increased the handloom production

    Question 73.
    What did the Indian and British manufacturers do to expand their market?
    Year of Question :(2011 )

    Answer:They took the help of advertisement and tried to expand their market

    Question 74.
    Why did the Manchester industrialists begin to put label on the cloth bundles that were sent to India?
    Year of Question :(2019 )

    Answer:The label made the company name familiar to the buyers and also acted as the mark of quality

    Question 75.
    Why were the images of gods and goddesses regularly appeared on the labels?
    Year of Question :(2019 )

    Answer:The labels carrying images of gods and goddesses gave divine approval to the goods being sold so that they appear somewhat familiar to Indian people

    Question 76.
    What message did the Indian manufacturers try to give through advertisements?
    Year of Question :(2016)

    Answer:The Indian manufacturers tried to convey the message through advertisements that if you cared for the nation then buy Indian goods

    Question 77.
    Who are the bourgeoisie?
    Year of Question :(2018 )

    Answer:The upper middle class in Europe is called the bourgeoisie

    Question 78.
    How did handloom cloth production increase in early 20th century?
    Year of Question :(2011 )

    Answer:Handloom cloth production increased in the early 20th century due to new technology like looms with flying shuttle

    Question 79.
    How did the early Indian entrepreneurs make their fortune?
    Year of Question :(2017 )

    Answer:The early entrepreneurs made their fortune through China trade

    Question 80.
    For which trade did the early entrepreneurs make a fortune?
    Year of Question :(2017 )

    Answer: China trade

    Important Question

    Social Science Class 10 Important Questions History Chapter 5 The Age of Industrialisation
    Question 1.
    Why did the industrial production increase in India during the First World War?
    Year of Question :(2014 )

    Answer: The War had created a new opportunity for the industrial production in India

    • The War situation had forced the British mills to produce things that were needed for the army. This had led to the decline of Manchester imports into India. Suddenly, Indian mills had a vast home market to supply to
    • As the War prolonged, Indian factories were called upon to supply war needs: 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, local industries consolidated their position, substituting foreign manufactures and capturing home markets
    Question 2.
    How did a series of inventions in the eighteenth century increased the efficiency of each step of the production process in cotton textile industry?
    Year of Question :(2013 )

    Answer: A series of inventions in the 18th century increased the efficiency in every step of the production process, especially of cotton. The process of producing cotton involved carding, twisting, spinning and milling

    • The inventions enhanced the output per worker, enabling each worker to produce more, and they made possible the production of stronger threads and yam
    • Richard Arkwright then created the cotton mill. Cloth production was spread all over the countryside and was carried out in village households
    • Also now the costly new machines could be purchased, set up and maintained in the mill under one roof and management. This allowed a more careful supervision over the production process, a watch over the quality and the regulation of labour, all of which was difficult to do when production was in the countryside
    Question 3.
    What problems were faced by the Indian cotton weavers in the 19th century?
    Year of Question :(2015 )

    Answer: The Indian cotton weavers faced many problems in the 19th century

    • Their export collapsed
    • The local market shrank being flooded by the Manchester imports. Produced by machines at lower costs, the Manchester cotton goods were so cheap that they attracted the buyers and the Indian textiles could not compete with them
    • By 1860, Indian weavers faced a new problem. They could not get sufficient supply of raw cotton of good quality. This happened because a Civil War had broken out in America and the cotton supplies from the US to Britain were cut off and Britain turned to India. As raw cotton export from India increased, the price of raw cotton shot up. Indian weavers were forced to buy raw cotton at a very high price, so weaving did not remain profitable
    • Factories in India also produced goods at a mass scale which flooded the Indian markets. Thus the Indian weavers faced a tough time and it became difficult to survive
    Question 4.
    Why did technological changes occur slowly in Britain in early 19th century? Explain any three reasons?
    Year of Question :(2016 )

    Answer: Technological changes occurred slowly in Britain due to the following reasons

  • New technology was expensive and merchants and industrialists were cautious about using it. For example, at the beginning of the 19th century, there were only 321 steam engines. There were no buyers of steam engines for years
  • The machines often broke down and repair was costly
  • The machines were not as effective as their inventors and manufacturers claimed
  • Machines were oriented to produce uniform, standardised goods for a mass market. But the demand in the market was often for goods with intricate designs and specific shapes which required human skill, not mechanical technology. At that time the upper classes preferred things produced by hand
  • Question 5.
    Who were gomasthas? Why were they appointed? How did they treat the weavers?
    Year of Question :(2017 )

    Answer: The paid servants appointed by the East India Company to supervise weavers are called gomasthas. The East India Company appointed them to establish a more direct control over the weavers and to eliminate traders and brokers connected with cloth trade. The gomasthas acted arrogantly and punished weavers for delays in supply, often beating them. In many weaving villages there were reports of clashes between weavers and gomasthas as they often marched into villages with sepoys and peons

    Question 6.
    Who were gomasthas? How did they become good partners of the British management system?
    Year of Question :(2015)

    Answer: The Gomasthas were paid servants whose job was to supervise weavers, collect supplies and examine the quality of cloth. The aim of the East India Company behind appointing gomasthas was to work out a system of management and control that would eliminate competition, control costs and ensure regular supplies of cotton and silk. Soon there were clashes between the weavers and the gomasthas who began ill-treating the weavers

    • It developed a system of management and control that would eliminate competition, control costs and ensure regular supplies of cotton and silk from India. For this reason, gomasthas were appointed to supervise, collect supplies and examine the quality of cloth
    • They did not allow the company weavers to sell their produce to other buyers. Once an order was placed, the weavers were given loans to purchase the raw material. Weavers who had accepted loans from the company had to hand over the cloth they produced to the gomasthas only
    Question 7.
    Describe the achievements of any three early industrialists in British India?
    Year of Question :(2012 )

    Answer: Having earned enough from trade, some businessmen had visions of developing industrial enterprises in India. In Bengal, Dwarkanath Tagore made his fortune in the China trade. He turned to industrial investment, setting up six joint stock companies in 1830s and 1840s. In Bombay, Parsis like Dinshaw Petit and Jamsetjee Nusserwanjee Tata who built huge industrial empires in India accumulated their initial wealth from exports to China and raw cotton shipments to England. Seth Hukumchand, a Marwari businessman, who set up the first Indian jute mill in Calcutta in 1971, also traded with China

    Question 8.
    How did many Indian Entrepreneurs survive despite of tight economic controls imposed by the British Government?
    Year of Question :(2013 )

    Answer:

    • Many Indians became junior players in the trade with China by providing finance, procuring supplies and shipping consignments
    • Some merchants from Madras traded with Burma, Middle East and East Africa and accumulated capital
    • Certain other commercial groups operated within India by carrying goods from one place to another, banking money, transferring funds between cities and financing traders
    Question 9.
    Explain any three factors responsible for the decline of the cotton textile industry in India in the mid-nineteenth century?
    Year of Question :(2013 )

    Answer:

    • As cotton industries developed in England, industrial groups began to pressurize the Government to impose import duties on cotton textiles so that Manchester goods could sell in Britain without facing any competition from outside
    • At the same time industrialists persuaded the East India Company to sell British manufactures in Indian market as well. Exports of British cotton goods increased dramatically in the early 19th century
    • The export market for the Indian cotton weavers collapsed and the local market shrank, being glutted with Manchester imports
    • The imported cotton goods were cheap and our weavers could not compete with them
    • When the American Civil War broke out the cotton supplies to Britain from the US were cut off. As raw cotton export from India increased, the price of raw cotton shot up. Weavers in India were starved of supplies and forced to buy raw cotton at exorbitant prices
    Question 10.
    Advertisements played a part in expanding the markets for products and in shaping a new consumer culture. Explain?
    Year of Question :(2014 )

    Answer:

    • When Manchester industrialists began selling cloth in India, they put labels on the cloth bundles, to make the place of manufacture and the name of the company familiar to the buyer
    • When buyers saw Made in Manchester, written in bold on the label, they felt confident to buy the cloth
    • But labels did not carry words and texts. They carried images and were beautifully illustrated with images of Indian gods and goddesses. The printed image of Krishna or Saraswati was also intended to make the manufacture from a foreign land, appear familiar to Indians
    • Manufacturers also printed calendars to popularise their products. These calendars were used even by the illiterate. They were hung in tea shops and in the homes of the poor and even in offices and middle class apartments
    • When Indian manufacturers advertised, the nationalist message was clear and loud. If you care for the nation, then buy only Indian products. Advertisements became a vehicle of the nationalist message of Swadeshi
    Question 11.
    Why was it difficult to get jobs in Indian factories and mills even when so many of them had come up in the 19th century?
    Year of Question :(2015 )

    Answer: Even when the mills multiplied and demand for workers increased, it was difficult to get jobs. The reason was that

    • The number seeking jobs always remained more than the jobs available
    • During the same time agriculture was also not prosperous. Therefore, there was always a large influx of unemployed youths from villages who came to cities and towns looking for jobs in the newly set up mills and factories
    • Entry into the mills was also restricted. Industrialists usually employed jobbers to get new recruits. Very often, the jobber was an old and trusted worker. He got people from his own village, ensured them jobs and helped them settle in the city. Gradually, they began to demand money and gifts for this favour and began controlling the lives of workers
    Question 12.
    How was foreign trade from India conducted before the age of machine industries?
    Year of Question :(2015 )

    Answer:

    • Before the age of machine industries, silk and cotton goods from India dominated the international markets in textile. Coarse cottons were produced in many countries, but finer varieties came from India. Armenian and Persian merchants took the goods from Punjab to Afghanistan, Eastern Persia and Central Asia
    • Bales of fine textiles were carried on camel back through the mountain passes of North-West Frontier
    • A vibrant sea trade operated through pre-colonial ports-Surat connected India to the Gulf, Masulipatnam on the Coromandel coast and Hooghly in Bengal had trade links with South East Asian ports
    Question 13.
    Analyse the contribution of Dwarkanath Tagore in the field of industrial development?
    Year of Question :(2015 )

    Answer:

    • In Bengal, Dwarkanath Tagore made his fortune in the China trade before he turned to industrial investment. He set up six joint-stock companies in 1830s and 1840s
    • Tagores enterprises sank along with those of others in the wider business crises of the 1840s, but later in the 19th century many of the China traders became successful industrialists
    • Dwarkanath Tagore believed that India would develop through westernization and industrialisation. He invested in shipping, mining, banking, plantation and insurance. He had visions of developing industrial enterprises in India
    Question 14.
    How did many Indian Entrepreneurs survive despite of tight economic controls imposed by the British Government?
    Year of Question :(2017 OD )

    Answer:

    • Many Indians became junior players in the trade with China by providing finance, procuring supplies and shipping consignments
    • Some merchants from Madras traded with Burma, Middle East and East Africa and accumulated capital
    • Certain other commercial groups operated within India by carrying goods from one place to another, banking money, transferring funds between cities and financing traders
    Question 15.
    Describe the achievements of any three early industrialists in British India?
    Year of Question :(2017 )

    Answer: Having earned enough from trade, some businessmen had visions of developing industrial enterprises in India. In Bengal, Dwarkanath Tagore made his fortune in the China trade. He turned to industrial investment, setting up six joint stock companies in 1830s and 1840s. In Bombay, Parsis like Dinshaw Petit and Jamsetjee Nusserwanjee Tata who built huge industrial empires in India accumulated their initial wealth from exports to China and raw cotton shipments to England. Seth Hukumchand, a Marwari businessman, who set up the first Indian jute mill in Calcutta in 1971, also traded with China

    Long Answer Questions (LA) 5 Marks
    Question 16.
    Why were there frequent clashes between gomasthas and weavers in the villages?
    Year of Question :(2012 )

    Answer: The gomasthas were paid servants whose job was to supervise weavers, collect supplies and examine the cloth. In many weaving villages there were clashes between the gomasthas and the weavers who began ill-treating the villagers

    • The earlier supply merchants had lived within the villages and had a close relationship with the weavers, looking after their needs and helping them in times of crisis
    • The new gomasthas were outsiders with no long-term social link with the village
    • They acted arrogantly and punished weavers for delays in supplies, beating and flogging them with the help of sepoys and peons
    • The weavers lost their freedom to bargain for prices and sell to different buyers and received miserably low prices from the company
    • The loans they had accepted had tied them to the British Company
    Question 17.
    Describe the process of gradual growth of factories in England in the light of problems it faced?
    Year of Question :(2013 )

    Answer: The earliest factories in England came up by the 1730s. Their number multiplied in the late 18th century. A series of inventions in the 18th century increased the efficacy of each step of the production process. They enhanced the output per worker, enabling each worker to produce more. With the creation of cotton mill by Richard Arkwright, all the processes of cloth production were brought together under one roof and management. This allowed a more careful supervision of the production process, a watch over quality, and the regulation of labour, all of which had been difficult to do when production was in the countryside

    Question 18.
    Highlight Any five points which enabled the handloom sector score over machine made goods and face the competition?
    Year of Question :(2013 )

    Answer: The handloom sector scored over the machine made goods and was able to face competition because

    • This happened partly because of technological advancements. By the second decade of the 20th century, weavers started using fly shuttle. This increased productivity of every worker, sped up production and reduced labour demand. By 1941, over 35 per cent of handlooms in India were fitted with fly shuttles. In regions like Travancore, Madras, Mysore, Cochin and Bengal, 70 to 80 per cent of handlooms had fly shuttles
    • There were many other small inventions that helped weavers improve productivity and compete with mills
    • Also, the demand for finer varieties of cloth bought by the rich, was very stable. Even famines did not affect the sale of Banarsi or Baluchari sarees
    • Mill production could not imitate and compete with specialized weaves such as the famous sarees with woven borders and the famous lungis and handkerchiefs of Madras
    Question 19.
    How did the First World War prove to be a boon to the Indian Industries? Explain?
    Year of Question :(2013 )

    Answer: The First World War proved to be a boon to Indian Industries

    • The war created a dramatically new situation with British Mills busy with war production to meet the needs of the army, Manchester imports into India declined
    • Suddenly, Indian mills had a vast home market to supply to
    • As the war prolonged, Indian factories were called upon to supply war needs, jute bags, cloth for army uniforms, tents and leather boots, horse and mile 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, local industrialists consolidated their position, substituting foreign manufactures and capturing home markets
    Question 20.
    Explain the process of industrialization in Britain during the 19th century?
    Year of Question :(2017 )

    Answer: The most dynamic industries in Britain were clearly cotton and metals. Growing at a rapid pace, cotton was the leading sector in the first phase of industrialization up to the 1840s. Later iron and steel industry led the way. With the expansion of railways in England from the 1840s and in the colonies from 1860s, the demand for iron and steel increased. The new industries could not displace traditional industries. At the end of the 19th century, less than 20 per cent of the total workforce was employed in technologically advanced industrial sectors. The pace of change in the traditional industries was not set by steam-powered cotton or metal industries. Ordinary and small innovations were the basis of growth in many non-mechanized sectors such as food processing, building, pottery, glass work, tanning, furniture making and production of implements. The technological changes occurred slowly. New technology was expensive and merchants and indust

    Question 21.
    Explain any five ways by which new markets and consumers were created in India by British manufacturers?
    Year of Question :(2014 )

    Answer:

    • When Manchester industrialists began selling cloth in India, they put labels on the cloth bundles, to make the place of manufacture and the name of the company familiar to the buyer
    • When buyers saw Made in Manchester, written in bold on the label, they felt confident to buy the cloth
    • But labels did not carry words and texts. They carried images and were beautifully illustrated with images of Indian gods and goddesses. The printed image of Krishna or Saraswati was also intended to make the manufacture from a foreign land, appear familiar to IndiAnswer
    • Manufacturers also printed calendars to popularise their products. These calendars were used even by the illiterate. They were hung in tea shops and in the homes of the poor and even in offices and middle class apartments
    • Figures of important personages, of emperors and nawabs adorned the advertisements and calenders. The message often seemed to say that if you respect a royal figure, then respect this product as it was being used by kings
    • When Indian manufacturers advertised, the nationalist message was clear and loud. If you care for the nation, then buy only Indian products. Advertisements became a vehicle of the nationalist message of Swadeshi
    Question 22.
    How did cotton factories become an intimate part of the English landscape in the early nineteenth century?
    Year of Question :(2017 )

    Answer: A series of inventions in the eighteenth century increased the efficiency in every step of the production process, especially of cotton. The process of producing cotton involved carding, twisting, spinning and milling

    • The inventions enhanced the output per worker, enabling each worker to produce more, and they made possible the production of stronger threads and yam
    • Richard Arkwright then created the cotton mill. Cloth production was spread all over the countryside and was carried out in village households
    • Also, now the costly new machines could be purchased, set up and maintained in the mill under one roof and management. This made the process more centralised and integrated
    • This allowed a more careful supervision over the production process, a watch over the quality and the regulation of labour, all of which was difficult to do when production was in the countryside
    • In the early nineteenth century new mills and factories with new technologies became extremely visible
    Question1.
    What is "Proto-Industrialisation"?

    Answer:

    • Proto-Industrialisation refers to the phase before factories, when large-scale industrial production took place in the countryside
    • Merchants gave money to peasants and artisans to make goods for the international market
    • This process involved the towns and villages, with production done in homes rather than factories
    Question2.
    Why did merchants move to the countryside before the Industrial Revolution?

    Answer:

    • Guilds in towns had strict rules and controlled production, preventing new merchants from entering
    • In the countryside, peasants were eager to work because they had limited income from farming
    • This allowed merchants to expand production without interference from the guilds
    Question3.
    What role did the "cotton mill" play during industrialization?

    Answer:

    • Richard Arkwright invented the cotton mill in the late 18th century
    • The cotton mill brought all processes, like carding, spinning, and weaving, under one roof
    • This allowed for better supervision, improved quality, and increased productivity
    Question4.
    Why did some industries prefer hand labour over machines in 19th-century Britain?

    Answer:

    • In Victorian Britain, there was no shortage of human labour, and wages were low
    • Machines were expensive to maintain, and seasonal industries like gasworks needed workers only part of the year
    • Hand labour allowed industrialists to avoid the large investment in machinery
    Question5. How did the "East India Company" control weavers in India?

    Answer:

    • The East India Company used gomasthas (supervisors) to manage the weavers
    • Weavers were given advances (loans) to buy raw materials and had to sell their products only to the Company
    • The gomasthas enforced this control and often punished weavers for delays
    Question6.
    What impact did Manchester imports have on Indian weavers?

    Answer:

    • The Manchester cotton goods flooded the Indian market by the 1850s, making local handwoven products more expensive
    • Weavers could not compete with the cheap machine-made goods, causing many to lose their livelihood
    • By the 1860s, raw cotton was in short supply, further harming Indian weavers
    Question7.
    What was the impact of the First World War on Indian industries?

    Answer:

    • During World War I, British factories focused on producing goods for the war, so Indian industries were left to supply the local market
    • Indian factories began producing goods like army uniforms, leather boots, and other essentials
    • This led to a significant increase in industrial production in India
    • Question8.
      How did industrialisation in India affect small-scale industries?

      Answer:

      • Even as large industries grew, small-scale industries and handloom production remained important
      • Handloom workers adapted by using fly shuttles to increase productivity
      • Some weavers, producing finer varieties of cloth like Banarasi saris, managed to survive the competition from mills
      Question9.
      Why did Surat decline as a port by the end of the 18th century?

      Answer:

      • With the rise of the East India Company, new ports like Bombay and Calcutta grew under European contro
      • .
      • The old ports, like Surat, which were controlled by Indian merchants, began to lose significance
      • Trade from these older ports decreased, and many merchants went bankrupt
      Question10.
      What changes occurred in advertising during the Industrial Age?

      Answer:

      • Advertisements were used to persuade people to buy new products
      • Manchester goods carried labels with images of Indian gods like Lakshmi to appeal to Indian buyers
      • Calendars with religious or royal images were also used to promote products, making them seem more familiar and trustworthy

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