Exam Pandit
Exam Pandit
: Creation of free India and Pakistan on midnight of August 14/15, 1947 as domin
ions.
1947-64 : Jawaharlal Nehru Prime Minister of India.
1948 : Assassination of Mahatma Gandhi (January 30).
: Raja-gopalachari appointed first Indian Governor-General (June 21).
1949 : New Constitution of India adopted and signed (November 26).
1950 : India become a Republic. New Constitution comes into force (January 26).
: Dr. Rajendra Prasad, first President of Indian Republic.
: Planning Commission was set up
1951 : Inauguration of First Five Year Plan.
1952 : First General Election in India
: National Development Council (NDC) set up.
: Family Planning is launched.
1953 : Conquest of Mount Everest.
: University Grants Commission (UGC) is set up
: CBI is set up
: Formation of Andhra Pradesh on
linquiestic basis 1954 : Chou En-lai, the Chinese Premier visits India.
: Panchashila signed between China and India.
1955 : Hindu Marriage Act and Indian Citizenship Act.
1956 : Reorganisation of Indian States on linguistic basis
: 2nd Five Year Plan launched.
: Nationalisation of insurance companies.
1957 : Second General election. Introduction of
decimal system of coinage.
: National Calender based on Saka era adopted.
1959 : Dalai Lama reaches India for political asylum, Indo-Chinese relations wor
sen.
: Panchayat Raj introduced in Rajasthan.
1961 : Goa, Daman and Diu liberated from Portu
: Arjuna Award introduced
1962 : Indo-China War.
1964 : Death of Jawaharlal Nehru
: Lal Bahadur Shastri becomes Prime Minister.
1965 : Indo-Pak War.
1966 : Tashkent Declaration
: Death of Lal Bahadur Shastri
: Indira Gandhi becomes Prime Minister.
1969 : First Nationalisation of 14 Banks.
: First Dada Sahib Phalke Award was given to Davika Rani
1971 : Indo-Pak War
: Birth of Bangladesh.
1972 : Shimla Agreement between India and Pakistan.
1973 : Project Tiger
1974 : Underground nuclear explosion carried out at Pokhran (May 18).
1975 : Emergency declared in the country.
: Aryabhatta goes to orbit.
1977 : Janata Party comes to power.
: Vajpayee address UNO in Hindi.
1978 : Denomination of high value notes of Rs.
1,000, Rs. 5,000 and Rs. 10,000 demonetised.
1979 : Morarji Desai resigns as Prime Minister.
: Charan Singh becomes Prime Minister.
: Death of Loknayak Jayprakash Narayan.
: Bhakara I launched
1980 : Mother Theresa gets Bharat Ratna.
: Six more commercial banks nationalised.
1981 : Apple was launched
: First Indian Antartic Expedition to
Qusim. Dakshin Gangothri, India s first permanent station at Antartica was set up.
: The President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, returns the Office of Profit Bill for recons
ideration
: A.P.J. Abdul Kalam becomes the first President to make a sortie in a combat ai
rcraft after flying in a Sukhoi-30 MKT after take off from Lahegaon airbase, Pun
e.
: N. Gopalaswami takes over as the new Chief Election Commissioner.
: The GSLV - FO
2 launch from Sriharikota,Andhra Pradesh ends in failure after the vehicle crash
es into the Bay of Bengal.
: Social activist Arvind Kajriwal is elected for the 2006 Ramon Magsaysay Award
in the Emergent Leadership category.
: The President A.P.J Abdul Kalam, confers the 39th Jnanapith Award on Marathi w
riter Vinda Karandikar.
: Actor Shabana Azmi is chosen for the Gandhi International Peace Prize 2006.
: The protection of women from Domestic Violence Act 2006 comes into effect.
: The Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, presents the 21st Indira Gandhi Prize for N
ational Integration to lyricist Javed Akhtar.
: Sri Lankan President, Mahinda Rajapaksa inaugurates the three - day first Asia
n Mayor s meet in Dehra Dun.
INDIAN HISTORY
Pre-Historic Period
The earliest traces of human existence in India so far discovered is between 4,
00,000 and 2,00,000 BC from Sohan valley (now in Pakistan)
Neolithic settlements in Indian subcontinent are not older than 4000 BC.
Wheat and barley were the first cereals grown by Indians.
The name India was derived from the rivername Sindhu which is also known as Ind
us.
India was originally considered as a part of a larger area called Jambu-dvipa (
The continent of Jambu tree)
Krita, Treta, Dwapara and Kali are the four ages
of traditional Hindu thought.
Gulf of Cambut Culture
The Gulf of Cambut culture which was discovered recently from the Bay of Cambut
in Gujarat
dates back to 7500 BC.
This was found out by the National Institute of
Open Technology (NIOT).
Indus Valley Civilisation
The Harappan culture spread over the whole of
Sind, Baluchistan, almost the whole of Punjab,
northern Rajasthan, Kathiawar and Gujarat.
Harappa the first Indus site, was discovered by
Dayaram Sahni in 1921. It is situated in the province of West Punjab, Montgeomer
y district in Pakistan.
Harappa is located on the bank of river Ravi.
Mohanjedaro was excavated in 1922 by R.D.
Banarjee. It is situated in the Larkhana district in
Sind on the right bank of river Indus (Now in
Pakistan)
The Great Granery, the Great Bath a piece of
woven cotton, a beared man in steatite and a
bronze dancing girl are found from Mohanjedaro.
An assembly hall was also discovered from
Mohanjodaro.
The most important feature of Harappan
civilisation was town planning and urbanism.
The word Mohanjedaro in Sindi language means
the mount of the dead .
Mohanjodaro was believed to have destructed
by flood.
Vedic Age
Vedic Age is the period of Aryans in India from
1500 - 500 BC.
Most Probable Home of the Aryans is Central
Asia. This theory is ofMax Muller.
The word Aryan literally means high born, but it
generally refers to language.
The word Veda is derived from the word vid
which means knowledge.
Vedas are the oldest literary works of mankind.
Vedas are four in number, they are Rig Veda,
Yajurveda, Samaveda and Atharva Veda. Rig veda
is the oldest veda.
Vedas are collectively known as Sruti
Vedangas are collectively known as Smriti
Vedangas are six in number. They are,
Siksha - Phonetic
Kalpa - Ritual
Vyakarana - Grammar
Nirukta - Etymology
Chhanda - Metrics and
Jyotisha - Astronomy
There are 1028 hymns in Rigveda. It is divided
into ten Mandalas (Chapters).
Rig Vedic Hymns sung by priests were called
Hotris.
Sruti literature belonged to the Sathyayuga,
Smriti belonged to Treatayuga, Puranas belonged
to Dwaparayuga and Thanthra literature belonged
to Kaliyuga.
Rigveda starts with the line Agnimele Purohitam
Famous Gayatri Mantra is contained in the
Rigveda (It is believed to have composed by
Vishwamitra)
Yajurveda deals with sacrifices and rituals.
Yajurvedic hymns are meant to be sung by priests
called Adhavaryu .
Yajurveda is derived into two: SuklaYajurveda
(White Yajurveda) andKrishna Yajur Veda (Black
Yajurveda)
Sama Veda deals with Music.
Sama Vedic hymns are meant to be sung by priests
called Udgatri.
Atharva veda is a collection of spells and incantations. Ayurveda is a part of
Atharva Veda, which
deals with medicine.
The saying,
War begins in the minds of men
is
from Atharva Veda.
The 10th Mandala of Rigveda contain the
Purusha Sukta hymn which tells about the origin of caste system.
Upanishads are 108 in number. Upanishads are
philosophical works
Upanishads are known as the Jnanakantas of
Vedas.
The words Sathyameva Jayate have been taken
from Mundaka Upanishad
Brahdaranya Upanishad was the first to give the
doctrine of Transmigration of Soul and Karma.
Puranas are the part ofSmriti literature. They are
18 in number 6 vishnupuranas, 6 sivapuranas and
6 Brahmapuranas.
Bhagvata purana is divided into 18 skandas The
10th skanda mentions about the childhood of Sri
Krishna.
Skanda purana is considered as the largest
purana.
Brahmapurana is also known as Adipurana.
Adhyatma Ramayana is included in the
Brahmantapurana.
Cattle was the chief measure of wealth of the vedic
period.
Rigvedic tribe was referred to as Jana .
Many clans (vis) formed a tribe.
The basic unit of society was kula or the family
and Kulapa was the head of the family.
Visah was a cluster of gramas.
Important tribal assemblies of the Rig Vedic period were Sabha, Samiti, Vidhata
and Gana.
The Aghanya mentioned in many passages of
Rigveda applies to cows.
The Rigvedic religion was primitive animism.
Indra was the greatest God of Aryans and Agni
occupied second position.
Varuna was God of water and Yama was the Lord
of dead.
Savitri was a solar diety to whom the famous
Gayatri Mantra is attributed to.
Prithvi was Earth Godess.
The battle of ten kings mentioned in the Rig Veda
was fought on the division of water of river Ravi.
It was fought on the banks of River Ravi
(Purushni).
Indra was known as Purandara.
The people called Panis, during the Vedic period
were cattle breeders.
The Vedic God in charge of truth and moral order
was Varuna.
Indra Played the role of the Warlord. He is also
considered as the rain god.
The two priests who played a major part during
the Rig Vedic period were Vasishta and
Visvamitra.
Later Vedic Period
The period assigned to Later Vedic Phase is 1000
BC to 600 BC.
Later Vedic people used particular type of pottery called Painted Grey Ware (PG
W)
The Later Vedic Aryans were familiar with two
seas, the Arabian Sea and the Indian Ocean.
Rice became the staple diet of Indian people during the Later Vedic Period.
The term Rashtra which indicates territory first
appeared in the later vedic period.
Mention of the word Sudras - Rigveda (10th
Mandala)
Mention of the Gotra is found in the
Atharvaveda.
Origin of Kingship is found in Aitareya
Brahmana.
Soma was an intoxicating drink mentioned in
the 9th Mandala of the Rig Veda.
is Phalguna.
Vasudeva was the last great king of Kushana
Dynasty.
Kushana school of art is also referred to as the
Mathura school.
Gupta Empire (320 - 540 AD)
Gupta Empire was founded by Sri Gupta.
Ghatotkacha was the second ruler.
Chandra Gupta I was the real founder of the Gupta
Empire. He came to the throne in 320 AD.
He was the first ruler to adopt the title
Maharajadhiraja.
He laid the foundation of Gupta Era on 26 February 320 AD.
Samudra Gupta succeeded Chandragupta I in 335
AD.
The Allahabad Pillar inscription composed by
Harisena contains information about
Samudragupta s conquests.
Allahabad Pillar inscription is also known as
Prayagaprasasti .
Samudra Gupta is also known as Linchchavi
Dauhitra . (son of the daughter Kumaradevi of
Lichchavis)
Samudra Gupta is described as Indian Napoleon
by V.A. Smith.
Samudra Gupta composed
Vahukabita
and had
the title Kaviraja .
Historically Important Places
Ayodhya Birth place of Sri Rama (UP)
Amber Palace Rajasthan
Aghakhan Palace Pune (Maharashtra)
(Gandhi and Kasturba were
kept in prison here)
Kedarnath Holy place of Hindus
(Utharanchal)
Amarnath Pilgrim centre (Kashmir)
Elephanta caves Near Mumbai
Ellora Caves Maharashtra - 34 cavetemples
(Hindu, Buddha - Jaina)
Rajgir Jain Temple in Bihar
Golden Temple Amritsar - Harmandir Sahib of
Sikhs
Golgumbus Bijapur (Karnataka)
Tomb of Muhammed Adil Shah
Tanjore Capital of Cholas Brihadveswara Temple
Charminar Hyderabad (Monument of
Plague eradication)
Konark Temple Orissa (Sun Temple)
Qutab Minar Delhi
Khajuraho Near Bhopal (M.P.) 80 temples
Mahabalipuram Centre of Pallava architecture
(Tamil Nadu)
Kurukshetra Battle of Mahabarata (in
Haryana)
TajMahal Agra (UP) Built by Shah Jahan
Sanchi Buddhist Stupa (Madhya
Pradesh)
Haridwar Holy Place of Hindus
(Uttaranchal)
Sanskrit was the court language of the Guptas.
India became
Greater India
under Samudra
Gupta.
Samudra Gupta was an accomplished Veena
player.
Chandragupta II the greatest of Gupta rulers was
popularly known as Vikramaditya.
He adopted the title Sakari after his victory over
Rudradaman II of Gujarat.
Fa hein, the Chinese traveller, visited India during his period.
The exploits of Chandragupta II are glorified in
an iron pillar inscription fixed near Qutub Minar.
Chandragupta II adopted the title Vikramaditya
as a mark of his victory over the Sakakshatraps.
Nine gems or Navratnas was a famous Scholastic Assembly in the court of Chandragupt
a II.
The members in the Ninegems were - Kalidasa,
Kadakarbhara, Kshapanaka, Varahmihira,
Vararuchi, Vethalabhatta, Dhanvantari,
Ammarasimha, Sanku.
Chandragupta II was succeeded by his son
Kumaragupta I.
Skandagupta Vikramaditya was the last great
ruler of Gupta Empire.
Skandagupta Vikramaditya was the only hero in
Asia and Europe who defeated the Hunas in their
glorious period.
Vishnu Gupta was the last ruler who died in 570
AD.
Mantriparishad assisted the king in administration.
Most important Industry of the Gupta period was
textile.
Period of the Gupta is compared to Periclean
Age of Greece , Augustan Age of Rome and
Elzabethan Age of England .
Period of the Guptas is considered as the Golden
Age in the history of India.
Earlier Guptas had their capital at Prayag in
Allahabad, later it was shifted to Ujjain by
Chandragupta II.
The most important officers in the Gupta empire
were Kumaramatyas.
The royal seal of the Guptas bore the emblem of
Garuda.
Aryabhatta was the first to treat Mathematics as
a separate subject. He wrote Aryabhattiyam. He
belonged to the Gupta period. Aryabhatta was
the first to use Decimal System.
Panchsidhanta, Brihat Jataka, Laghu Jataka and
Brihat Samhita are the works of Varahamihira.
The best specimen of the Gupta paintings are seen
at Ajanta caves and the Bhaga caves.
The Gupta period marked the beginning of Indian
temple architecture.
Guptas issued large number of gold coins in India.
Guptas largely patronised art and architecture.
Guptas patronised the Gandhara school of art,
Madhura School of Art and the Andhra School
of Art.
The Fresco paintings in the Ajanta caves are examples of the art of the Guptas.
man I.
Dandin the author ofDasakumaracharitam, lived
in the court of Narasimhavarman II.
Narasimhavarman II was the most important ruler
of the Pallava dynasty.
He founded Kailasanatha Temple and the Shore
Temple at Mahabalipuram.
Rashtrakutas
Rashtrakuta dynasty was founded by
Dandidurga in 753 AD. With the capital at
Manyakhed or Malkhed.
Rashtrakuta ruler Amoghavarsha I wrote
Kavirajamarga which is the earliest Kannada
work on poetics. He also wrote Prasnottarmalika.
The Kailasanath Temple at Ellora was founded
by the Rashtrakuta ruler Krishna I.
Krishna III (940 -968) was the last great ruler of
Rashtrakuta dynasty.
The Rashtrakuta power was overthrown by Thiala
II.
Pratiharas
The Pratiharas are also called Gurjara - Pratiharas
- belonging to the 36 clans of Rajputs.
The dynasty was founded by Nagabhatta I (725740)
Nagabhatta II made Kanauj his capital.
Pratihara ruler Mihir Bhoja adopted the title
Adivaraha .
Yashpal was the last ruler of this dynasty.
Sulthan Muhammed of Ghazni entred Kanauj during the period of the Pratiharas.
Palas
The Pala dynasty was founded by Gopala in 750 AD.
Famous Odandapuri University was founded by
Gopala.
The Vikramsila and Sompur Universities were
founded by the Pala king Dharmapala.
The Pala power was destroyed by Vijayasena who
founded the Sena dynasty.
Senas
The Sena dynasty was founded by Vijayasena
towards to end of 11th century. (1093)
Senas had a capital in Vikrampura and another
in Vijayapura.
About the middle of 13th century the senas were
overthrown by the Deva dynasty.
Elephanta caves
Jayadeva, the author ofGitagovinda was patronized by Sena ruler Lakshmana Sena.
Chauhans
The four Agnikula Rajputs were the Pratiharas,
Chau-hans the Solankis and Paramaras.
Chauhans had their capital at Ajmer and Delhi.
Ajayaraya established the city ofAjayameru or
Ajmer.
The most prominent ruler was Prithviraj III (11771192). He defeated Muhammed of Ghore in the
First Battle of Tarain (1191). But Ghore defeated
and killed him in the Second Battle of Tarain(1192).
Prithviraj Chauhan III was the last Hindu ruler
of Delhi.
Indra
First town in the vedic period to use burned bricks
Kausambi
First reference about lending money for interest
can be found in
Satpatha Brahmana
Rigvedic paintings have been discovered from
Bhagvanpura. It is in which state
Hariyana
Upanishad which mentions about police system
Brihadaranyaka Upanishads
God who was considered as God of Gods
Varuna
Community which was considered as untouchables by the Buddhists.
Chandalas
The language used by the Jains to spread their
religion
Prakrit
Who is considered as the St.John of Buddhism
Ananda
Who is considered as Devil by the Buddhists
Mara
Three daughters of Mara
lust, emotion and desire
The ruler who persecuted Buddhists
Pushyamitrasunga
Major philosophic school of Bhagvatism
Vishishtadvaita
Earliest reference about Srikrishna can be found
in
Chandoghya Upanishad
Hindu God who found place in Greek literature
Sri Krishna
Jain Thirthankara, who was related to Sri Krishna
Rishabhadeva (Ist Thirthankara)
Tamil god of the Sangham age for War and Victory
Kottavai
Saint who founded the Saivism
Lakulisa
Tamil kingdom of the Sangham Age which sent
an ambassador to the court of Roman Emperor
Augusts
Pandyas
First Sangham was founded by
Saint Agasthya
Famous poetess of the Sangham period
Avvaiyar
Greeco-Roman traders who visited South India
during the Sangham period were denoted with
the term
Yavanas
Sangham work which describes about Buddhism
Manimekhalai
The word used by Ashoka to denote Buddha
Bhagavati
Ashokan inscriptions were desciphered by James
prince in the year
1837
Indo-Greek ruler who had his boundaries upto
Pataliputra
Menander
Yuchi ruler who introduced gold coins for the first
time
Vima Kadphesus
Edict which mentions about the relation between
India and China
Nagarjunakonda
MEDIEVAL INDIA
Arab Conquest of Sindh
During the Khaliphate of Omar, Arab forces made
fertile attempts to get Bombay
Arabs captured Sindh in 712 AD.
The Arab conquest of Sindh was led by
Muhammed Bin Kassim.
Muhammed Bin Khasim was the nephew of AlHajaj, the governor of the Arab provinc
e of Basra.
Dahir, a Brahmin was the ruler of Punjab at that
time. He was killed by Kassim.
The Arabs lost control over Sindh in 779 AD.
Arab conquest of Sindh resulted in the spread of
Islam to North India.
But Islam was first introduced in India by Malik
Ibn Dinar in Kerala in 644 AD.
Turkish Invasions
Ghazni in Afghanistan was ruled by a Turkish
family called Gamini of Ghaznavid dynasty.
Muhammed Ghazni was the first Turkish conqueror of North India.
Muhammad Ghazni s father was Subu ktigin.
He attacked India only for want of wealth.
He attacked India seventeen times between 1000
and 1027 AD. He made all the raids in the guise of
Jihad.
First Invasion was in 1001 AD.
He defeated Jaipal and Anandpal of Shahi dynasty in 1001 and 1009 respectively.
The most important raid of Muhammed was the
Somanath expedition. It was in 1025. He completely
distroyed the temple. Somanath Temple was on
the sea coast of Gujarat.
Muhammed Ghazni died in 30th April 1030.
Later his son Masud attacked India and caputred
Kashmir.
The famous Persian poet Firdausi who wrote
Shahnama (The Book of Kings) lived in his
court.
Alberuni, an Arab Historian, who wrote Tarikhul-Hind (Reality of Hindustan), ac
companied
Muhammed Ghazni to India.
Al-Firdausi is known as Indian Homer , Persian Homer , or The Immortal Homer of the
East .
Muhammed of Ghore attacked India betwen 1175
and 1206 AD.
Muhammed Ghori made his first expedition to India and captured multan in 1175 A
D.
In the First Battle Tarain in 1191 (near Taneswar)
Muhammed Ghori was defeated by the Rajput
forces under Prithviraj Chauhan III.
In the Second Battle of Tarain (1192 AD)
Muhammed Ghori assisted by Qutub -ud-din
The title Sulthan was started by the Turkish rulers. Muhammed Ghazni was the fi
rst to assume
the title Sulthan.
The official language of the Delhi Sulthanate was
Persian.
Bahmani and Vijayanagara Kingdoms
The decline of the Sulthanate of Delhi gave birth
to two mighty states in South India the Bahmani
Kingdom of Gulbaraga and the Vijayanagara Empire.
The Bahmanis were Muslim rulers, while the rulers of the Vijayanagar were Hindu
s.
The Bahmani kingdom was founded by Zafar
Khan (Hassan) who took the title of Alauddin
Bahman Shah. He selected Gulbaraga as its capital and renamed it Ahsanabad.
There were total eighteen Sulthans and they ruled
from 1347 to 1527.
Muhammed Gawan was the famous minister of
Bahmini kingdom.
The last prince of the Bahmani Kingdom was
Kalimullah.
By 1527, the Bahmani kingdom was split up into
five independent principalities.
The Adil Shahis of Bijapur -founder - Yusuf
Adilshah (1489 - 90)
The Nizam Shahis of Ahamadnagar - founder Malik Ahmad (1499)
The Imadshahis of Berar - founder -Fateh Ulla
Imadshanti (1490)
The Qutubshahi kingdom of Golconda - founder
- Qutabshah (1512)
The Baridshahis of Bidar - founder - Amir Ali
Barid (1527).
Vijaya Nagara Empire
The founders of Vijaya Nagar Empire were
Harihara and Bukka Rai, the revenue officers of
the Kakatiya ruler Pratap Rudra Deva II of
Warrangal.
They founded the dynasty in 1336 with the capital as Vijaya Nagara on the banks
ofTungbhadra
river witht the help ofSaint Vidyaranya.
Vijayanagara kingdom lasted for 230 years and
produced four dynasties.
Sangama (1336 - 1485)
Saluva - (1485 - 1505)
Tuluva (1505 - 1565) and
Aravidu (1565 - 1672)
Krishna Deva Raya(1509 1529) belonged to the
Tuluva dynasty. The Italian traveller Nicolocont
visited his court.
Krishnadeva Rayar is
known as Andhra Bhoja
He wrote Ushaparinayam and Amuktamalyada
Allasani Peddanna, a Telugu poet was a courtier
of Krishna Deva Raya. He is considered as the
Andra Kavita Pitamaha
the Grand Father of
Telugu poetry.
Ashtadiggajas was the famous Scholastic Assembly in the court of Krishna Deva Ray
a.
Vijayanagar Empire was visited by many foreign
travellers.
Nicolo Conti - Venitian traveller, visited during
the reign of Devaraya I.
Abdur Razzak : Ambassador of Sulthan
ShahRukh to the court of Devaraya II.
Damingos Paes : He visited Krishna Devaraya s
court.
Ferona Nuniz : A Portuguese who visited during
Achyuta Raya s reign.
Durate Barbosa : A portuguese who visited
Krishnadeva Raya s court.
Athenasius Nikitin (1415) : He was a Russian,
who visited during Deva Raya I s period He wrote,
Voyage to India .
The Mughal Empire
The Mughals were originally Turks.
They belonged to the Chaghtai branch of the
Turkish race.
Period of the Mughal empire is known as Second
Classical Age. First Classical Age is the period
Guptas.
Mughal Empire is also known as Timurid Empire
because of its relation to Amir Timur.
Mughal Emperors are 20 in number. They ruled
India from 1526 to 1857. Only six are considered
great They are:
Zahiruddin Muhammed Babur (1526 - 1530)
Naziruddin Mirza Muhammed Humayun (1530 40 & 1555 - 1556)
Jalaluddin Muhammed Akbar - (1556 - 1605)
Nuruddin Muhammed Jahangir (1605 - 1627)
Krishnadeva Rayar
Shahabuddin Muhammed Shah Jahan (1628 1658)
Muhiyuddin Muhammed Aurangazeb Alamgir
(1658 - 1707)
Babur
Babur, the founder of the Mughal Empire, was
the fifth descendant of Timur
on Father s side and the fourteenth descendant of
Chengizkhan on mothers side.
Babur was born in Farghana in
Turkey on 14 Feb. 1483 as the
som ofUmer Sheik Mirza ad
Qulik Nigarkhanum.
Babur s father Umershiek Mirza was the grand
son of Amir Timur and the ruler of Farghana.
Babur became the ruler of Samarkhand at the Age
of 11.
He captured Kabul in 1504.
Then Babur attacked India 5 times for want of
wealth.
Babur s first Attack of India was in 1519 Bhera
was the first place captured by Babur.
In 1524 Daulatkhan, Ibrahim Lodhi s brother invited Babur to India.
On 21 April 1526 Babur defeated Ibrahim Lodhi,
the last Lodhi Sulthan in the First Battle of
Panipat.
On 16 March 1527 he defeated Rana Sangha of
following personalities.
Abul Fazal : Akbar s court historian who wrote
Akbar s biographical works Ain-i-Akbari and
Akbar Namah..
Abul Faizi : Persian poet and brother of Abul
Fazal. He translated Mahabharata into Persian in
name Razam Namah and Bhaskaracharya s
mathematical work Leelavati into Persian.
Mian Tansen : His original name was Ram Thanu
Pande. He was the court Musician of Akbar. He
composed a Raga, Rajdarbari in honour of Akbar.
Birbal : His real name was Mahesh Das. He is the
court jester of Akbar.
Akbar
Raja Todarmal : RajaTodarmal was Akbar s finance or revenue minister. He formulat
ed Akbar s
revenue system Zabti and Dashala systems. Raja
Todermal also translated Bhagavatapurana into
Persian.
Maharaja Mansing : Akbar s military commander.
Badauni : a historian who translated Ramayana
into Persian - Tarjuma -1-Ramayan.
Tulasidas : Hindi poet who
wrote Ramacharitamanas.
Akbar s military system was
known as Mansabdari system,
which included Ranks from 10
- 7000
Akbar was also responsible
for the introduction Persian as
the official language of
Mughals.
He divided the Mughal Empire into 12 Subahs
(provinces) for the administrative conveniences.
Akbar was also the first ruler to organise Hajj.
Pilgrimage at the government expense. The Port
Cambay in Gujarat is known as the Gate way to
Mecca from Mughal India .
Akbar was an accomplished Sitar player.
Mughal - Rajput friendly relation began during
the period of Akbar.
Jahangir
Early name of Jahangir was Salim. Akbar called
him Sheika Baba.
Jahangir came to the throne in
1605.
Jahangir was the son of Akbar
and Jodabai.
He married Mehrunnisa, an
Afghan widow in 1611 Later he
gave her the titles, Noor Mahal
(light of the palace) Noor Jahan (light of the world)
and Padusha Begum.
In 1606 Jahangir executed fifth Sikh Guru Guru
Arjun Dev, because he helped Jahangir s son
Prince Khusru to rebel against him.
In 1609, Jahangir received William Hawkins, an
envoy of King James I of England, who reached
India to obtain trade concession.
Balaji Vishwanath (1712 - 1720) Baji Rao (1720 40) Balaji BajiRao I (1740 - 61) andMadhav Rao I
(1761 - 1772) were the Peshwas who ruled
Maharashtra.
Baji Rao popularised the idea of Hindu
Padpadshahi or Hindu Empire.
Balaji Baji Rao s period witnessed the Third Battle
of Panipat in 1761. In this battle Ahmed Shah
Abdali of Afghanistan defeated the Marathas.
Madhava Rao was the last great Peshwa.
Last Peshwa was Baji Rao II.
Madhava Rao s period witnessed the disintegration of the Maratha power and the fo
rmation of independent kingdoms - Holkarofindor, Bhonsle of
Nagpur, Sindhya of Gwalior and Gaekwad of Baroda.
Shivaji s Council of Ministers was known as
Ashtapradhan. They were Peshwa, Pandit Rao,
Sumant, Sachiva, Senapathi, Amatya, Mantri and
Nyayadhyaksha.
Peshwa was the Maratha Chief Minister.
Chaudh and Sardesh Mukhi were two special laxes
collected by the Marathas.
The first Maratha war (1775 -82) Swai Madhav
Rao Vs Raghunath Rao with English support.
Second Maratha war 1803 - 05.
Third Maratha war 1816 - 19.
The last great Soldier and statesman of Maratha
was Nana Phadavnis (1800)
The Maratha script was called Modiscript.
Peshwaship was abolished in 1818
Baji Rao was the ablest of the Peshwas.
Shivaji did not allow women in his military camp.
The Marathas were equipped with an efficient
naval system under Shivaji.
Sikhism
Sikh is a sanskrit word which means desciple
Sikh religion was founded by
GuruNanak.
Guru Nanak was born was born
at Talwandi in Lahore, belonged
to the Khatri Caste (Mercantile
Community)
Nanak called his creed as
Gurumat or Guru s wisdom.
Shivaji
GuruNanak
GuruNanak was born in 1469 and died in 1538.
He was the first Guru of the Sikhs.
Nanak preached only in Punjabi.
Nanak nominated Guru Angad as his successor.
Guru Angad introduced Gurumukhi Script. He
also compiled Guru Nanak s biography Janam
Sakis.
Langar or free community dining was also introduced by Guru Angad.
Third Sikh Guru was Amar Das. He started the
Manji system ie, branches for the propagation of
Sikhs. He made Guruship hereditory.
Guru Ramdas was the fourth Sikh Guru. He
founded the city of Amritsar. The place for the
city was donated by Akbar.
whic
Jhansi Rani
DadaBai Naoroji
Badruddin Tyabji was the first Indian barrister at
Bombay High Court. He was the first Muslim
president of INC. He became the third president
of INC in Madras session in 1887.
W.C. Banerjee founded the Bombay chronicle in
1913 and the Moderate school .
S.N. Banerjee founded the Indian Association in
1876. He was the first President of Indian National
Liberal Federation (1918).
Gopalakrishna Gokhale founded the Servants
of India Society in 1905.
K.T. Telang became the first Hardworking secretary
of INC.
Jawaharlal Nehru observed the Early Congress
to be an English knowing upper class affair .
George Yule was the first foreigner to become
the President of INC. (1888, Allahabad)
Gopala Krishna Gokhale was populary known as
EARLY ASSOCIATIONS
Year.. Organisation Founder Place
1838 ... Landholders society ............................. Dwaraknath Tagore ...
............................... Calcutta
1839 ... British India Society.............................. William Adams .....
.................................... London
1851 ... British India Association....................... Devendranath Tagore ..
............................. Calcutta
1862 ... London India Committee ....................... C.P. Mudaliar ..........
.................................. London
1866 ... East India Association .......................... Dadabhai Naoroji ....
.................................. London
1867 ... National Indian Association .................. Mary Carpenter .........
............................... London
1872 ... Indian Society ...................................... Anand Mohan Bose
................................. London
1876 ... Indian Association ............................... Anand Mohan Bose and
S.N. Banerjee ...... Calcutta
1883 ... Indian National Society......................... Shishir Chandra Bose .
.............................. Calcutta
1884 ... Indian National Conference ................... S M Banerjee ...........
................................. Calcutta
1885 ... Bombay Presidency Association ........... Mehta and Telang ............
........................ Bombay
1888 ... United India Patriotic Association ......... Sir Syed Ahmed Khan.......
........................ Aligarh
1905 ... Servants of India Society ...................... G.K. Gokhale .........
................................... Bombay
1920 ... Indian Trade Union Congress ............... NM Joshi (founder) ........
.......................... Lucknow
Lala Lajpat Rai (President)
1924 ... All India Communist Party..................... Satyabhakta ............
................................. Kanpur
1928 ... Khudai Khidmatgar ............................... Abdul Gaffar Khan ...
................................ Peshwar
1936 ... All India Kisan Sabha ........................... Sahajananda and N.J.
Ranga ..................... Lucknow
1940 ... Radical Democratic Party....................... M.N. Roy ..............
................................... Calcutta
the Socrates of Maharahstra . M.G. Ranade was
conductor.
During the Tripura session (1939) Subash Chandra
Bose defeated Pattabhi Sitaramayya (Gandhi s
candidate in presidential election) but later resigned and Rajendra Prasad becam
e the president.
During Calcutta session (1928) first All India
Youth Congress was established.
During the Delhi session (1918) along with S.N.
Banerjee many liberals resigned and Rajendra
Prasad became its president.
Aurobindo published New Lamps For Old. It was
the first systematic critic of the Moderates.
The radical wing of the INC that emerged at the
end of the 19th century is referred to as the Extremist Group.
The main leaders of the Extremist Group were Lala
Lajpat Rai, Bal Gangadhar Tilak, B.C. Pal and
Aurobindo Ghosh.
Tilak asserted Swaraj is my birthright and I shall
have it.
Tilak started two newspapers the Mahratha in
English and the Kesari in Marathi. He started
Sivaji festival to stimulate nationalism.
Lord Curzon Partitioned Bengal on 20th July 1905
as a part of the Divide and Rule Policy .
Rabindra Nath Tagore composed Amer Sonar
Bengla as a part of ante
partition movement,
which later became the
National Anthem of
Bangladesh.
Boycott of British products was first suggested by Krishna
Kumar Mitra in
Sanjivani. Rabindra Nath Tagore
The Swadeshi Movement was started in 1905.
Charka (spinning wheel) came to typify the
popular concern for country s economic self sufficiency.
Swadesh Bandhav Samiti of Barisal founded by
Ashwini Dutt was the largest Volunteer body to
support Swadeshi Movement.
First real labour union - The Printers Union was
formed on October 1905.
Vande Mataram Movement was started by
Chandra Pal in Madras
Tilak began the Swadesh Vastra Pracharine
Sabha to propagate Swadeshi Movement.
Savarkar founded Mitra mela .
Chakravarthi Vijiaraghavacharya was the first
Indian leader to undergo imprisonment in 1882.
He was an extremist leader. He was the first Indian to draft a Swaraj constituti
on for India which
was presented at the Madras session in 1927.
First congress leader to suffer severe terms of
imprisonment for the sake of the country was Bal
Gangadhar Tilak.
Tilak wrote Gita Rahasya .
Bipin Chandrapal started an English weekly New
India.
Bipin Chandrapal founded Bande Mataram in 1906
(an organization)
League.
The Lucknow session of the Indian National Congress in 1916 marked the re union
of the Moderates and Extremists together at Lucknow in 1916.
The Lucknow pact was executed between the
congress and Muslim League in 1916.
Montegue - Chelmsford Reforms 1919
It is also known as the Government of India Act
of 1919.
In 1918, Edwin Montague, the Secretary of State
and Lord Chelmsford, the Viceroy produced their
scheme of constitutional reforms which led to the
enactment of the Government of India Act of
1919.
The Provincial Legislative Councils were enlarged
and the majority of their members were to be
elected. The provincial government were given
more powers under the system of dyarchy.
Indian National Congress in a special session at
Bombay in August 1918 criticised the reform as
disappointing and unsatisfactory .
The Montague Chelmsford reforms introduced
dyarchy in the provinces.
Provincial subjects were divided into Reversed
subjects and Transferred Subjects .
Central legislature was made bicameral by this
reform.
Jalianwala Bagh Massacre - April 13,
1919
In 1919, Rowlatt Act, which authorised the government to detain any person with
out trial was
passed.
The Act was passed during the period of Lord
Chelmsford.
The official name of the Rowlatt Act was the Anarchical and Revolutionary Crime
s Act (1919).
Sir Sydney Rowlatt was the president of the committee to make proposals for the
Act.
C.Sankaran Nair was the only Indian official
member who supported the bill, while all the 22
elected Indian members in the Imperial Legislative Council opposed the bill.
Gandhiji set up Rowlatt Committee to protest
this act.
The protest against this Black Act was the
strongest in Punjab where it led to the Massacre
at Jalianwala Bagh Amritsar on April 13, 1919. It
was on a Baishaki day. The British Officer General Dyer ordered his troops to op
en fire at unarmed gathering, who were gathered there to protest against the arr
est of their popular leaders
Dr. Saifuddin Kitchlew and Dr. Satyapal.
On this occasion Tagore renounced his Knighthood in protest.
Michael O Dyer Governor of the Punjab province supported the incident and on Marc
h 15,
Martial law was declared.
Gandhiji renounced the Kaiser-i-Hind medal
given to him for his work during the Boer War.
Hunter Committee was appointed to enquire into
the Jallianwallah Massacre (1920)
Hunter Commissions report was described by
Gandhiji as a white wash .
Sardar Udham Singh, who took the name Ram
certain broad principles for the future constitutional set up: Which were publis
hed later as white
paper (March 1933)
The Poona Pact was signed on 25 September 1932
at Bombay. By this the separate electorate for deFamous Conspiracy Cases
Case Date Accused
Nasik 1909-10 Vinayak Savarkar
Conspiracy
Alipore 1908 Aurobindo Ghosh
Hawrah case 1910 Jatin Mukharjee
Dacca Case 1910 Pulin Das
Delhi case 1915 Amirchand, Awad
Bihari and Bal Mukund
Lahore case 1929 - 30 Bhagat Singh, Rajguru
and Sukhdev
Banaras case 1915 - 16 Sachindranath Sanyal
Kakori case 1925 Rama Prasad Bismil and
Ashfaq
pressed classes was abolished.
Harijan upliftment now became Gandhiji s main
concern. He started an All India Anti-Untouchability League in September 1932 an
d the weekly
Harijan in January 1933. The January 8, 1933 was
observed as Temple Entry Day .
Only Indian to participate all the three Round Table
conference was B.R. Ambedkar.
Socialists
It was above all Jawaharlal Nehru who imported a
socialist vision to the national movement.
At the Lahore session in 1929 Nehru introduced
this idea.
The Congress Socialist Party was founded in
October 1934 at Bombay under the leadership of
Jaya Prakash Narayan, Acharya Narendra Dev
and Minoo Masani
The CSP supported the Quit India Movement.
Socialist ideas led to the emergence ofCommunist Party of India (CPI) and the C
ongress Socialist party.
Towards the end of 1920 M.N. Roy and other Indian emigres at Tashkant formed a
communist
party of India. In India on 1st September, 1924
Satyabhakta in a press note announced the for
mation of the Communist Party of India with himself as the Secretary.
In December 1928 the All India Worker and Peasants Party came into existence.
The government declared CPI illegal in 1934.
Revolutionary Terrorism
Ram Prasad Bismil, Jogesh Chatterjee and
Sachindranath Sanyal founded the Hindustan
Republican Associations (HRA) in 1924, whose
object was to establish a Federal Republic.
On 9 August 1925 ten revolutionaries robbed the
8-Downtrain at Kakori, near Lucknow. This is
known as Kakori Conspiracy.
HRA became Hindustan Socialist Republican
Association in 1928.
Bhagat Singh and B.K. Dutt threw bomb on the
Central Legislative Assembly against the passage
of the Public Safety Bill and the Trade Disputes
Bill.
Chittagong Armoury Raid was planned by
on 15th 1947.
Integration of States
The integration of Princely States was done by
Sardar Patel with the assistance ofV.P. Menon.
By August 1947, all the 554 States, with the exception only of Hyderabad, Kashm
ir and Junagarh
acceded to the union.
On 26th October the Maharaja of Kashmir,
Harisingh signed the
Instrument of Accession
and Sheik Abdulla is known as Lion of Kashmir .
The Nizam of Hyderabad signed the agreement
to join the Indian Union through police action in
1948.
Indian National Army (INA)
The idea of Indian National Army was first conceived by Mohan Singh at Malaya,
an officer in
British Indian Army.
The first division of INA was formed in September 1942 with Japanese help.
Subash Chandra Bose began to associate with
INA by July 1943. The command was handed over
by Rash Bihari Bose
To the Indians Subash Chandra Bose said you
give me blood I will give you freedom . .
Subash Chandra Bose set up two INA headquarters at Rangoon and Singapore.
The women s regiment called the Rani Jhansi
regiment was under Captain Lekshmi Segal.
He was the first to address Gandhiji as the Father of the nation
in his appeal on
the Azad
Hind Radio Singapore.
In may 1944 INA captured Mowdok and hoisted
the tri-colour flag on Indian soil.
The Japanese government handed over the
Andaman and Nickobar island to him which were
renamed Shaheed and Swaraj islands respectively.
The INA troops surrendered before the British
army in 1945.
The British Government of India charged INA
soldiers of waging war against the king. The trials were held in the Red Fort in
Delhi.
The first three accused were capt. P.K. Sehgal ,
Capt. Shah Nawaz and Gurbaksh Singh Dhillon.
Subash Chandra Bose was born at Cuttack in
Orissa.
He appeared for the Indian Civil Service in 1920
and passed with merit, but resigned before completing his probation in April 192
1, he joined the
Congress and plunged into the national movement.
He was unanimously elected President at the
Haripura Congress session in 1938 and was reelected for the second term at the T
ripuri session in 1939, defeating Dr. Pattabhi Sitaramayya,
who was supported by Gandhiji.
He resigned the Presidentship of INC in April 1939
and founded All India Forward Block and the
Kisan Sabha.
But in January 1941, he escaped out of India and
reached Berlin (Germany) from where he arrived
in Singapore in 1943.
Bose was popularly known as the Netaji
He was reportedly killed in an air cash over Taipei,
Ben.
The original autobiography of Gandhiji written in
Gujarathi language was Sathya na Karogo .
Liberty or Death written by Patrick French deals
with antogonism in Gandhis life.
Gandhiji called his hanging clock my little dictator.
Ente Gurunathan poem written by Vallathol
Narayana Menon speaks about Gandhiji.
That s my mother Gandhiji said these words
about Bhagavatgita.
Gandhiji s political guru was Gopalakrishna
Gokhale.
Gandhi s prisoner is a book written by Uma
Dupfeli Mistri , daughter of Gandhis son, Manilal.
Harilal, Manilal, Ramdas and Devdas were
Gandhijis four sons.
I follow Mahatma is a book written by
K.M.Munshi.
Unto This Last of John Ruskin greately influenced Gandhiji
R.K. Narayan wrote Waiting for the Mahatma .
A week with Gandhi, Gandhi and Stalin and Life
of Mahatma Gandhi are the books written by
Fischer.
Gandhiji grandson Thushar Gandhi led the second Dandi March from Marh 12 - Apri
l 17, 2005
on the 75th anniversary of Dandi March.
Gandhiji s autobiography
My Experiments with
Truth was written in 1922 while he was in Jail. It
describes his life from 1869 to 1921.
It was translated into English byMahadev Desai.
Leon Tolstoy is considered as the spiritual guru
of Gandhiji.
One of the great dreams of Gandhiji was the establishment of Grama Swaraj. He s
aid India lives
in villages . He started Sewagram Ashram on
30 April 1936.
Gandhiji said
Non violence is not one form it is
the only form of direct action .
Gandhiji once sarcastically (humorously) called
jail
His Majesty s Hotel .
''Generations to come it may scarce believe that
such a one as this ever in flesh and blood walked
upon this earth'', Einstein said about Gandhiji.
Truth and Non-violence are my Gods
Gandhiji
Untouchability is a crime against God and Mankind Gandhiji.
Swaraj for me means freedom for the meanest of
our countrymen
- Gandhiji
The light has gone out of our lives and there is
darkness everywhere
Nehru on the death of
Gandhiji.
Non-violence is the law of our species as violence is the law of the brute
Gandhiji
Indian culture is neither Hindu, Islam, nor any
other wholly. It is a fusion of all - Gandhiji
Non Co-operation with evil is as much a duty
as co-operation with good
- Gandhiji
My only hope lies in prayer and answer to
prayer
- Gandhiji
Rabindnranath Tagore
Rabindranath Tagore was born at Calcutta in
Vio
Ambassadors or High
Commissioners of foreign
countries are received by .........
8. No money bill can be
introduced in the Legislative
Assembly without the
recommendation of the .........
9. Any dispute between the two
houses of the Parliament can
be resolved by joint sitting of
both the houses summoned by
the .........
10. The provisions as to
disqualification on grounds
of defection by a member of
Parliament are contained in
.........
11. The minimum number of
members that must be present
to hold the meeting of the Lok
Sabha is .........
12. The number of members of a
state Legislative Assembly
cannot be more than .........
13. The proclamation of national
emergency ceases to operate
unless it is approved by the
parliament within .........
14. The first no confidence
motion was moved in the Lok
Sabha after independence
was in the year .........
15. A bill for alteration of
boundaries of states shall not
be introduced in the
Parliament without the
recommendation of .........
16. The Supreme Court passed
the special judgement that the
basic tenets of our
constitution cannot be
changed by the Parliament by
any amendment, in the .........
case.
17. A member of Parliament will
lose his seat if he remains
absent from all meetings
without permission for a
period of ......... days.
18. Judges of the Supreme Courts
cannot practice, after
retirement, in .........
19. If the Finance Minister fails to
get the annual budget passed
in the Lok Sabha, the Prime
Minister should be expected
to .........
20. The name of an Indian State
can be changed by .........
21. The Finance Commission is a
......... body.
22. The article which lays down
the amendment of the
constitution is ...................
23. The introduction of no
confidence motion in the Lok
Sabha requires the support of
at least ......... members.
24. Betting and Gambling is
included in ......... list.
25. Prisons are included in .........
list.
26. According to the Indian
Constitution, the ministers
shall hold office during the
pleasure of the .........
27. The function of a Public
Service Commission in India
is .........
28. In ......... of the constitution,
reference to Hindus shall
include a reference to Sikhs.
29. Raja Chellayya Committee
dealt with .........
30. The Constituent Assembly of
India took all decision by .........
Answers sto Fill in the blanks
1. Attorney General of India
2. Speaker
3. six months
4. Parliament
5. Lok Sabha
6. The Prime Minister
7. The President
8. Governor
9. President
10. 10th schedule
11. 1/10 of the total membership
of the house
12. 500
13. one month
14. 1963
15. The President
16. Minerva Mills Ltd. & others,
17. 60
18. any courts in the country
19. submit the resignation of his/
her cabinet
20. the Parliament of India
21. Quasi-Judicial
22. 368
23. 50
24. State
25. State
26. Prime Minister of India
27. Advisory
28. Article 25
29. tax reforms
30. consensus.
Principles, method of
presided elections, nomination of members of Rajya
Sabha by the President. From
the Canadian Constitution
was taken the idea of a
federation with a strong
Centre, and placing residuary
powers with the Centre. The
Weimer Constitution of
Germany was the source of
provisions concerning the
suspension of fundamental
rights during emergency,
while the idea of a Concurrent
List was taken from the
Australian Constitution.
7. Indian Parliament is vested
with the power to control over
the Executive. The Executive
is collectively responsible to
the Lok Sabha. Thus it is
assumed that the working of
the Union Government is
effectively controlled by the
Parliament. However, in
practice this control is
exercised only in the form of
question on adminstration
raised during the question
hour in the houses of
Parliament. Parliament also
has control over the revenue
and expenditure of the
Government. The Executive,
cannot impose any tax
without legislative sanction.
If any tax is imposed without
legislative authority, the
aggrieved person can obtain
his relief from the courts of
India. As for expenditure, the
pivot of parliamentary control
is the Consolidated Fund of
India. No money can be
issued out of the Consolidated
Fund of India unless the
expenditure is authorised by
an Appropriation Act. In fact,
Executive cannot spend the
public revenue without
parliamentary sanction. The
Policy Resolution of the
Parliament are meant as
supreme guidelines for the
functioning of the executive
Government. Parliament also
specifies the manner in which
certain specific powers
constitutionally granted to
different authorities is to be
exercised.
8. According to the
Constitution of India, the
concept of Minorities
incorporates the groups of
people differing from the
other in religion, culture and
language numerically the
majority. Thus there are
religious, linguistic and
cultural minorities. Religious,
cultural and educational
safeguards are incorporated
in the Constitution to protect
all minority groups (religious,
cultural and linguistic.)
The safeguards are:
i. Right to maintain
religious and charitable
institutions and manage
religious affairs without
state interference.
ii. Religious and linguistic
minorities may establish
and administer their own
institutions and avail of
state grants without
discrimination.
iii. A minority language may
be recognised as one of
the official language in a
State.
iv. Special officer for
linguistic minorities to
report on their status.
Besides these, the state
does not discriminate on
the basis of religion,
culture etc, in manners of
public appointment and
employment.
9. The Parliament can claim a
privilege if (i) the
Constitution grants it
specifically or (ii) it has been
created by a law of the
Parliament (iii) it was enjoyed
by the lower house on
January 26, 1950. More
specifically the Parliament
enjoys freedom of speech,
immunity from court
proceeding, freedom from
arrest in civil cases within 40
days before and after the
session of the Parliament and
immunity from liability in
respect of Parliamentary
papers. The Parliament can
A motion
rule in a country.
? Lobbying: The practice of
trying to canvass support for
a particular measure or
viewpoint through personal
contacts with the members of
legislature. This is usually
done in the lobbies to which
public has access. Hence the
term lobbying.
? Legal Sovereignity: The
Sovereignity of a state which
is legally vested in a particular
agency e.g., the Monarch of
England, the President of
India etc. Such persons may
be called titular or nominal
sovereigns.
? Manifesto: It is a document
which is issued, generally
before a major election, by a
political party, outlining its
policies and programmes.
? Martial Law: A state of affairs
declared by a civilian
government in which the
military forces are authorised
to govern and control certain
areas without the usual
constraints of democratic
decision making or without
accepting civil rights. Martial
law is a temporary state of
affairs and is legitimate in the
sense that is directly decided
upon and granted by the
civilian government.
? Nyaya Panchayat: It is the
judicial panchayat and is
considered an adjunct of the
Panchayati Raj system. It is
meant to provide speedy and
cheap justice to the villagers.
? People Sniffer: Indictment of
Government through unofficial media.
? Plebiscite: A vote by which
the people of an entire
country or district, express an
opinion for or against a
proposal especially on a
choice of government or ruler.
? Political Defection: The
phenomenon of a legislator
elected as a member of a
political party quitting the
party without resigning the
seat is called political
defection.
? Prorogation: The discontinued
power.
? Filibuster: Parliamentary
device of long speeches, not
necessarily relevant to
obstruct delay or bargain over
a measure under consideration
for voting.
? Guillotine: The act of putting
all the demands to vote
without discussion on the last
day marked for discussion of
budget.
? Ratification: The formal
adoption by a state of a treaty
signed by the representatives.
? Refrendum: A device of direct
democracy which is used to
ascertain the view of electorate
either in the form of
government or as a legislative
proposal on a policy issue.
? Question Hour: The first hour
of every parliamentary sitting
is slotted for this. During this
time, the members ask
questions and the ministers
usually give answers. The
questions are of three kinds
namely starred, unstarred
and short notice.
? Zero Hour: It is an informal
device available to the
members of the parliament to
raise matters without any
prior notice. The zero hour
starts immediately after the
question hour and lasts until
the agenda for the day. The
time gap is 60 minutes.
? No-Confidence Motion:
Article 75 of the constitution
says that the ministry stays in
the office so long as it enjoys
confidence of the majority of
the members of the LokSabha.
In otherwords, the Lok Sabha
can remove the ministry from
office by passing a non
confidence motion. The
motion needs the supports of
50 members to be admitted.
Abbreviations
AAGSP : All Asian Gana
Sangam Parishad.
ABVP : Akhil Bharatiya
Vidhyarthi Parishad.
AG : Attorney General.
AIADMK : All India Anna
Dravida Munnetra
Kazhagam.
BJP : Bharatiya Janatha
Party.
BKD : Bharatiya Kranthi Dal.
BJD : Biju Janata Dal.
BLD : Bharatiya Lok Dal.
BSP : Bahujan Samaj Party.
CPI : Communist Party of
India.
CPI (M) : Communist Party of
India (Marxist).
CMP : Common Minimum
Programme.
CAT : Central Administrative
Tribunal.
CAG : Comptroller and
Auditor General.
DMK : Dravida Munnetra
Kazhagam.
ESMA : Essential Services
Maintenance Act.
EVM : Electronic Voting
Machine.
FBL : Forward Block.
INL : Indian National
League.
ISP : Indian Socialist Party.
IUML : Indian Union Muslim
League.
JD (U) : Janata Dal (United).
JP : Janata Party.
MDMK : Marumalarchi Dravida
Munnetra Kazhagam.
NCP : National Congress Party.
NDA : National Democratic
Alliance.
POTA : Prevention of Terrorism
Activities (Act).
PDP : People s Democratic
Party.
PMK : Pattali Makkal Katchi.
RJD : Rashtriya Janata Dal.
RJP : Rashtriya Janata Party.
RLD : Rashtriya Lok Dal.
RPI : Republican Party of
India.
RSP : Revolutionary Socialist
Party.
SJP : Samajwadi Janata Party.
SAD : Shiromani Akali Dal.
TDP : Telugu Desam Party.
TULF : Tamil United Liberation Front.
UPA : United Progressive
Alliance.
Amendments deal with
? Amend. 7(1956) Implement State Reorganisation Plan.
? Amend. 25 (1971) Amended Art. 31 regarding
the right of the state to acquire private property
for public purpose.
? Amend. 42 (1976) Brought about drastic changes
8 major groups.
? They are: Alluvial soil, Black soil, Red soil, Laterite soil, Forest soil, Ari
d and Desert soils, Saline
and Alkaline soils and Peaty and Organic soils.
Alluvial Soil
? Alluvial soil contributing the largest share, is
formed by the deposition of sediments by rivers
in the interior parts of India and by the sea waves
Anthroth Island
The largest Island in Lakshadweep
hydrated double iron and titaniferous magnetite.
? Black soil found in Maharashtra, Gujarat, West
Madhya Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh and Tamil
Nadu
Red Soil
? Red soil is formed by the weathering of ancient
metamorphic and crystalline rocks.
? They are airy and need irrigation support for cultivation. Red soil is suitabl
e for the cultivation of
pulses and coarse grains.
? Red soils are poor in nitrogen, phosphorous, potassium and organic matter.
? They are more suitable for the cultivation of rice,
in the coastal areas of the country.
? Alluvial soil is the best agricultural soil because
(i) They contain a variety of salts derived from
Himalayan rocks.
(ii) They are light and porous, therefore easily
tillable.
(iii) They are good for canal irrigation because of
high water table and an easily penetrable stratum.
? Alluvial soils are rich in potash and poor in nitrogen and organic matter.
? Alluvial soils are suitable for cultivation of almost
all kinds of cereals, pulses, oil seeds, cotton, sugarcane and vegetables.
? Ahmedabad, Baroda and Kheda districts of
Gujarat, Orissa and
Kerala are some of
the states in which
alluvial soil is
found.
? The coastal alluvium is of tidal origin.
? The desert alluvium
or 'Loess' is
bought by wind
erosion.
Black Soil
? Black soil is found
largely in the
Deccan plateau.
? Black soil is suitable for the cultivation of cotton and
therefore it is called
black cotton soil.
? The black colour of
the black soil is attributed to the presence of compounds
of Iron and alum i n i u m ,
accumulated humus, aluminium silicate, colloidal
ragi, tobacco and vegetable.
Laterite Soil
? Laterite soils are formed by the weathering of laterite rocks. Laterite soils
named as 'Meghna.'
? knphpw {_lva]p{Xbpw KwK-tb-m hep-XmThe River Ganga is
the longest river
(2640 km) in India. Its
source is at Gangotri
glacier in the
Himalayas.
sW-nepw Ch-bpsS sNdn-sbmcp `mKw am{Xta
Cy-bn-eqsS Hgp-Ip-p-p.
? Brahmaputra is the only river in the world which
form a river island named 'Majauli Island.'
? Indus is the longest river of Indian sub-continent.
It is 2900 km long. It flows mainly through Pakistan.
? Sutlej, Beas, Ravi, Chenab and Jhelum are the five
tributaries of Indus. Mount Kailash in Tibet is the
source of Indus river. It enters into the Arabian sea.
? The Ravi is the smallest river of Punjab and is wellknown as the 'River of Lah
ore.' It rises near the
Rohtang pass in the Kulu hills of Himachal Pradesh.
? The Chenab is the largest of Indus tributaries. It
has a total length of 1,800 km in India.
Peninsular rivers
? Peninsular rivers (The Deccan System) are generally rainfed and comprises the
rivers of peninsular India. They are shorter and seasonal in nature.
? River Godavari is the largest river system (1465
km long) of peninsular India. It is known as the
'Vridha Ganga' or 'Dakshin Ganga.' It rises from
Trambak in Nasik district in the Western Ghats.
? River Krishna rises from the north of
Mahabaleswar in the Western Ghats. It enters into
the Bay of Bengal. Krishna basin forms the third
largest river basin in India.
? River Cauvery rises from the Brahmagiri hills in
the Coorg district of Karnataka. About 55 percent
of the cauvery basin lies in Tamilnadu, 41 percent
in Karnataka and three percent in Kerala.
? River Pennar rises in the Kolar district of Karnataka.
? River Damodar rises from the Chottanagpur plateau near Tori in Palamau distric
t of Jharkhand.
? River Damodar of Jharkhand is called as "Sorrow
of Bengal and Jharkhand", because of frequent
flood, mass, soil erosion and heavy siltation.
? River Narmada which rises from the Amarkantak
plateau in Chhattisgarh is the largest among the
west flowing peninsular rivers.
? Narmada and Tapti are the major west flowing
rivers of India. They drains into the Gulf of
Cambay in the Arabian Sea.
? Satpula Mountain range lies between Narmada
and Tapti.
? Luni and Sabarmati are the other two west flowing peninsular rivers.
? Sabarmati rises from the Jai Samand lake of
Udaipur, Rajasthan.
? The Luni orginates from Annasagar in the Aravallis
and ends on the Sahni marshes, North of Rann of
Kutch.
? The world s largest delta, Sunderbans is formed
by the Ganges and Brahmaputra in West Bengal
and Bangladesh, in the Bay of Bengal.
? The Animal Welfare Board of India was established in 1962. Research programmes
in wildlife
are carried out by the Wild life Institute of India,
Dehradun and the Salim Ali Centre for
Ornithology and Natural History, Coimbatore.
? Project Tiger is the centrally sponsored scheme
launched on April 1, 1973 to save the tigers from
extinction on India.
? At present Madhya Pradesh tops the state with
greater number of Tigers. Madhya Pradesh is
known as the tiger state of India. M.P was followed by Uttar Pradesh.
? Project Elephant was launched to protect the wild
life and elephant population during the eighth
plan, ie in 1991.
? A wild life week is observed in the first week of
October every year.
? Biosphere Reserves: Biosphere preserve are multi
purpose protected area to preserve the genetic
diversity in representative eco system.
? So far fourteen biosphere reserves have been set
up.
? They are: Nilgiri, Nanda Devi, Nokrek, Great
Nicobar, Gulf of Mannar, Manas, Sunderbans,
Similipal, Dibru Daikhowa, Dehong Deband,
Panchmarhi, Khangchendzonga. Agastyamalai
and Achanakamar - Amar Kantak.
Mineral Wealth In India
? India is rich in mineral resources and has the potential to become an industri
al power.
? India is the 5th largest exporter of Iron ore in the
world.
? India is the largest producer of mica in the world.
? Jharkhand is the leading producer of mica. Bihar,
Rajasthan and Andhra Pradesh also produce mica.
? The Great plains of Northern India are devoid of
deposits of economic minerals. On the other hand
Jharkhand and Orissa areas on the North-Eastern
parts of Peninsular India possess large concentration of mineral deposits accoun
ting for nearly
three-fourths of the country s coal deposits.
Keibul Lamjo is the only floating National
Park in the country, is located in Manipur in
Loktak Lake
? Raniganj (West Bengal), Jharia (Bihar), Singarui
(Madhya Pradesh) and Korba (Chhattisgarh) are
the major coal fields in India.
? Mineral deposits are also scattered over the peninsular India and in parts of
Assam and Rajasthan.
? Thorium, a likely future substitute for Uranium as
a fission meterial in atomic reactors, occurs in considerable quantities as ThO2
, in the beach sands
of Kerala coast.
? Thorianite and Monazite are the main ores of thorium. Monazite deposits of com
mercial value are
found in about 160 kms between Cape Comorin
and Kollam in Kerala.
? India possesses the largest reserves of monazite
known in the world.
? Uranium compounds occurs in Singhbhum - copper belt of Jharkhand, Aravalli's a
nd central
Himalaya.
? Monazite which contains small percentage of Uranium Oxide occurs in the beach
sands of the east
and west in India.
? Marble is found largely in Rajasthan.
? Diamond is found at Panna in Madhya Pradesh.
? India is rich in iron, mica, manganese and bauxite.
? India is deficient in copper, lead, mercury, zinc,
tin, nickel, petroleum products, sulphur and
tungsten and spends considerable amounts in
foreign exchange on their imports.
? Gypsum deposit is found in Rajasthan.
? Leading salt producer in India is Gujarat. It produces 60% of salt of the coun
try.
? State with the largest mineral deposit is Jharkhand.
Formerly it was a part of Bihar.
? Jharkhand is the state with highest mineral output in India.
? Chottanagpur plateau is the richest mineral belt
of India.
? Gold is found in the Kolar Gold fields in Karnataka
and in small quantities in Ramigiri gold fields in
Andhra Pradesh.
? Lignite is mainly found in the Neyveli fields in Tamil
Nadu.
? Natural gas fields are Ankleshwar and Cambay in
Gujarat, Bombay high and Assam.
? Almost all the copper in India comes from
Singhbhum and Hazaribagh in Jharkhand and
Khetri in Rajasthan.
? India ranks third in the world in the production of
manganese. Orissa is the leading producer of manganese in the state.
? The first successful oil well was sunk at Digboi in
1889. The recently discovered sea-bed oil fields of
Bombay High are also yielding, substantial quantities of oil.
? Bombay High is the offshore oil field located in
the coast of Maharashtra.
? The first boring was made at Nahor Pung in November, 1866 in Makum area of Ass
am.
? Digboi in Assam is the oldest oil well of India.
? Oil and Natural Gas Commission (ONGC) was set
up at Dehradun in 1956.
Major Industries in India
? The Industrial policy adopted by the Government
of India envisages a mixed economy, i.e., the
co-existance of public and private sectors.
? The large scale industries of India covers iron
and steel, engineering, jute, cotton, textiles and
sugar industries.
? Cotton textiles is the oldest industry in India. It
has the largest number of workers employed in
an industry.
? Mumbai has become the 'cottonpolis' of India.
? Ahmadabad Vadodra region is the second largest
centre of cotton textile.
? Kanpur is famous for textiles and clothing, large
modern tanneries, leather works and shoe
manufacturing.
? Sholapur is famous for important textiles based
on cotton grown in local regular soils.
? The first modern cotton textile mill was estabMineral State of India
Jharkhand
lished in Bombay in 1851.
? Karnataka is the largest producer of silk.
? First modern silk factory - was set up at Howrah in
1832.
? Dharwar - Belgaum are known for cotton textiles
railway and general engineering goods.
? In 1870, the first steel industry, Bengal Iron
Company was set up at Kulti, West Bengal.
? The first large scale steel plant in the private sector was Tata Iron and Stee
l Company, Jamshedpur.
? The public sector steel plants are managed by the
Steel Authority of India (SAIL).
? Majority of the jute mills are located in West Bengal. As a foreign exchange e
arner, it is an important industry in the country.
? Rourkela steel plant in Orissa was set up under
the second five year plan in assistance with Germany.
? Bokaro, the biggest plant in Asia was set up under the fourth five year plan i
n association with
the Russian Government. It is located in
Jharkhand.
? Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) is a quasi governmental institution for drawi
ng up standards
for the products of Indian industry. It was established in 1947.
? National Productivity Council (NPC) is an autonomous body formed to inculcate
productivity in
industries, established in 1958.
? Godavari - Krishna delta is known for local tobacco, sugarcane, rice, oil, cem
ent and small textiles.
? The industry associated with sports materials
mainly located at Agra, Meerut (UP), Batalla,
Jalandhar (Punjab) and Delhi.
? Pinjore in Haryana and Jalahalli in Bangalore are
associated with watch industry.
? Moradabad is famous for brass utensils with engraving and polishing.
? Indian Explosives factory is located at Gomia in
Hazaribagh (Jharkhand).
? First fertilizer plant is near Ranipet of Tamil Nadu
in 1906.
? First public sector fertilizer plant is at Sindri
(Jharkhand)
? The first synthetic rubber factory was started in
Bareilly in 1955.
? There are only four newsprint manufacturing
plant:
(i) at Vellore (near Kottayam) in Kerala
(ii) at Nepanagar (M.P) - 1955
(iii) Shimoga in Karnataka.
(iv) Pugalur in Tirchchirapalli (T.N.)
? West Bengal is the leading state in paper manufacturing.
? NALCO (National Aluminium Company Ltd.),
BALCO (Bharat Aluminium Company),
HINDAL CO (The Hindustan Aluminium Corporation Ltd.), The Indian Aluminium Co. L
td.
(INDAL) are the leading producers of aluminium
in the country.
? India is the largest sugar producing country with
over 15% share of the global output. It is also the
largest consumer.
? Maharashtra produces more than one third of the
total production of sugar in country.
Agriculture
? Agriculture is the largest source of livelihood for
over 2/3rd (about 70%) of the population of India.
? Agriculture contributes 22% to the GDP.
? Crops in India can be classified into subsistence
crops, commercial crops, plantation crops and horticulture crops.
? Crop season in India can be classified into three
such as Kharif, Rabi and Zayad.
? Kharif (rainy) crops are sown in June/July and
harvested in September / October. Rice, Jowar,
Bajra, Ragi, Maize, Cotton and Jute are the important Kharif crops.
? Rabi (winter) crops are sown in October/ December and harvested in April/ May.
Wheat , Barley ,
Peas, Rape-seed, Mustard and Grams are the important Rabi crops.
? Zayad (Summer) crops : Swon in April, May and
June. Products are mostly fruits and vegetables.
? Cardamom is found mainly in Karnataka, Kerala,
Sikkim and Tamil Nadu.
Punjab is
known as the
'Granary of
India.'
? Cashewnut is mainly found in Kerala.
? Saffron is found mainly in Jammu and Kashmir.
? Groundnut is found mainly in Gujarat.
? Karnataka is the chief producer of coffee.
? Uttar Pradesh is the largest producer of sugarcane.
? Tobacco is mainly produced in Maharashtra.
? The Green Revolution (first) was launched in 1967-68.
? The second Green Revolution was launched in
1983-84.
? The father of Green Revolution in India - Dr. M.S.
Swaminathan.
? Father of Green Revolution - Norman Borlaug.
? To increase yield per hectare government of India
introduced a programme called Green Revolution. According to this programme the
farmers are
taught to use high yielding variety of seed (H.Y.V),
correct types of fertilisers and the government
has provided facilities of irrigation.
? Rice in the staple food of India.
? India has the largest area under rice cultivation in
the world
? In terms of production it is next only to China.
? India occupies second position in rice exports,
nex only to Thailand.
? Banana ranks no 1 in fruit production in India's
followed by Mango and citrus.
? Potato ranks No. 1 in vegetable production in India, followed by Brinjal, Toma
to, Cabbage.
? India accounts for 10% of world fruit production.
? India has highest productivity in grapes.
? India's share in mango production is 54% of world
production
? India leads the world in Mango, banana and acid
lime.
Goa
The most
populous state
of India: Uttar
Pradesh
The least
populous state:
Sikkim The eastern
most state:
Arunachal
Pradesh
The Mineral
state:
Jharkhand
The southern
most tip of
India: Indira
point
Largest
populated
city:
Mumbai
The
smallest
Union
Territory
INDIA
Water Bodies
INDUS
? Indus ( km) is
the largest
river of Indian
sub continent.
? J h e l u m ,
Chenab Ravi,
Sutlej, Beas are
the important
tributaries
? Chenab is the
largest of all
the Indus
tributaries
East Flowing
Rivers
? Mahanadi,
Godavari, Krishna,
Kaveri are the
important rivers.
? Godavari is the
longest river of the
Peninsula.
? Bhima, Krishna and
Thungabhadhra are
the three tributaries
of Krishna.
Brahmaputra
? Brahmaputra is
the second
largest river
system of Indian
sub continent.
? After making
deep gorges in
Namcha Barwa,
it enters India in
Arunachal
Pradesh as
Dihang . It
enters Sadiya
District of
Assam and
known as
Brahmaputra .
When it enters
Bangladesh, it is
named as
Meghna .
GANGA
? It is the longest
river in India
(2640 km).
? Formed by two
head streams,
Alakananda and
Bhagirathi which
join at Devprayag.
? The Yamuna is the
largest and the
most important
tributary of Ganga.
? Ganga is known as
Padma in
Bangladesh.
Narmada &
Tapti are the two
important west
flowing rivers of
India
Tapti
INDIA Physical Features
Mount Everest:
Highest Peak
in the World
(Nepal)
Kachenjunga
in Sikkim is
the highest
peak of the
Himalaya in
India
Aravallis is the
Oldest Mountain
Range in India
World s second
highest peak: K2
(Godwin Austin)
The highest peak in
Western Ghaths:
Anamudi
Cardomom Hills
Southern tip of
Eastern Ghats
Deccan Plateau
is the oldest part of
India
Bhor Ghat, Thal
Ghat, Pal Ghat are
the important passes
of Western Ghats
Now India have
Wild life Sanctuaries: 490
National Parks : 88
? Keibul Lamjo is the only floating National
Park in India (Manipur)
? India has the world s largest
reserves of iron.
? Chottanagpur plateau is the
richest mineral belt of India.
? India is rich in iron, mica,
manganese and bauxite but
deficient in copper, lead,
mercury, zinc, tin, nickel,
petroleum products, sulphur &
tungsten.
? India ranks third in the world in
the production of manganese
Orissa is the leading producer.
? Gold is found in Kolar Gold
fields in Karnataka and in small
quantities in Ranigiri gold fields
in Andhra Pradesh.
Sanctuaries/National Parks .... Location & State
Valmiki ............................ Hazaribagh (Jharkhand)
Simlipal ................................. Mayurbhanj (Orissa)
Palamau .......................... Daltonganj (Jharkhand)
Bandipur ................................ Mysore (Karnataka)
Kanha ...................... Mandla and Balaghat (M.P)
Melghat ............................................... Maharashtra
Ranthambore .......... Swai Madhopur (Rajasthan)
Corbett ............................. Garhwal (Uttarakhand)
Sunderbans ........................................ (West bengal)
Manas ......................................... Barpetal (Assam)
Periyar ........................................... Idukki (Kerala)
Sariska ....................................... Alwar (Rajasthan)
Buxar ....................................................West Bengal
Indravathi ............................................. Chattisgarh
Nagarjuna Sagar ............................ Srisailam (A.P)
Namdapha ................ Tirap (Aruanchal Pradesh)
Dudwa ............................. Lakhimpur Kheri (U.P)
Kalkad Mundanthuria Tirunelveli (Tamil Nadu)
Bandhavagarh ............. Shadol (Madhya Pradesh)
Panna ............................................ Madhya Pradesh
Dampha ....................................Aizwal (Mizoram)
Bhadra ..................................................... Karnataka
INDIA - Minerals
River Valley Projects
Year Plan.
1929 : Wall Street crash, the biggest financial
crisis of the century.
1930 : Pluto, the 9th planet, discovered by
Claude Tombaugh. First modern computer designed by Vannevar Bush and his
team.
1931 : Thomas Alva Edison dies.
1932 : Chadvick discovers the neutron.
1933 : Adolf Hitler, Nazi leader, becomes Chancel
lor of Germany.
1936 : Spanish Civil War begins. Germany s
People s Car
Volkswagen
launched.
1938 : Walt Disney s first feature-length cartoon,
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.
1939 : Spanish Civil War comes to an end. Pact of
Steel between Italy and Germany. World
War II begins.
1941 : Birth of modern commercial television.
The Japanese attack Pearl Harbour,
bringing USA into World War II.
1944 : DNA discovered. Bretton Woods Conference.
1945 : Mussolini killed by Italian partisans Hitler commits suicide. 50 nations
sign the
World Security Charger to establish UN.
UN Charter signed by 50 countries.
Postdam Conference. Little Boy, a Uranium-235 fission bomb, dropped over
Japanese city Hiroshima, explodes, 570
mts. above ground, instantly killing over
70,000. A 22-kiloton plutonium 239 bomb,
Fat Man, dropped over Nagasaki, explodes 510 mts above ground, killing
40,000 immediately. The International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank are
founded.
1946 : Paris Peace Conference.
1947 : IMF begins operations.
1948 : GATT enters into force. New state of Israel proclaimed.
1952 : King George VI of UK dies and Elizabeth
II becomes Queen. Artificial heart used
for the first time in USA. A non-violent
campaign against apartheid begins in
South Africa.
1953 : China s five-year plan begins. Hammarskjld
sworn in as UN Secretary- General. Mount
Everest conquered by Edmund Hillary and
Tensing Norway.
1956 : Non Alignment Movement founded.
1957 : Agatha Christie s Mousetrap performs its
1,998th performance. Russia launches a
man-made satellite, Sputnik-1.
1958 : US enters space arena, launching Explorer-1.
1959 : Dalai Lama, fleeing from Tibet reaches India and finds sanctuary. Picture
s of the dark
side of the moon sent back by Lunik III.
1960 : Sirimavo Bandaranaike sworn in as the
world s first woman Prime Minister in Sri
Lanka. John F. Kennedy elected president
of USA youngest man and first Roman
Catholic to be elected.
1961 : Inter-planetary space station launched by
USSR. Soviet Union s Yuri Gagarin, becomes the first man to fly in space. Alan
Pythagorus T
tory.
Thucydides another great Greek historian wrote
the history of the Peloponnesian war between
Athens and Sparta.
Socrates the Greatest of the Greek philosphers
was forced to commit suicide by drinking Hemlock a poison, in 399 BC.
Zantippee was the wife of Socrates.
Plato was the student of Socrates.
Plato s original name was Aristocles.
Plato founded a university named Academy in
Athens.
Republic was the famous work of Plato.
Aristotle was the famous student of Plato.
Aristotle was the tutor ofAlexander the Great.
Aristotle founded a school named Lycium in Athens.
Aristotle is considered as the father of Biology,
Politics and the Science of Reasoning.
Aristotle was considered as a Walking University .
Herodotus
Hipparchus calculated the diameter of the Moon.
Erathosthenes calculated the circumference of the
Earth.
The first Olympic Games were held at Olympia in
Greece in 776 BC.
The Roman Emperor Theo-dosius banned Olympics in 394 BC. (more details about Ol
ypics could
be seen in sports and games portion)
Macedonian Empire
Mascedonia was a Greek city state. It became a
prominent empire under its king Philip II (359 336 BC)
Alexander the Great, the son and successor of
Philip II, was born in 350 BC and became the ruler
in 337 BC.
Alexander defeated the Persian ruler Darius III.
Alexander captured Egypt and founded the city
ofAlexandria there.
Alexander invaded India in 326 BC and defeated
Porus, the ruler ofTaxila.
He died at the age of 33 in 323 BC at Babilonia.
Ptolemy, a commander of Alexander is considered as the Father of Cartography.
Archemedes the originator of the law of specific
gravity lived in the Hellenistic Age.
Roman Civilisation
Roman Civilisation developed on the banks of
river Tiber in Italy.
City of Rome was known as City of Seven Hills .
City of Rome was founded in BC 753 by two brothers Romulas
and Romus.
The idea of
Republic originated in Rome.
Senate was
the Roman
Assembly of
Elders
Punic Wars were fought between Rome and
Carthage.
Julius Caesar one of the prominent rulers of Rome
was born in 102BC.
American Civilisation
Mayan, Inca and Aztec are the main native American civilisations flourished bef
ore the European
colonization of America.
First American Civilisation developed between
1000BC and 1000 AD.
Mayan books written on the bark of trees were
known as Codid.
Mayan Civilisation declined in the 15th century
due to Spanish invasion.
Toltecs were another Amarindian people who
developed their civilisation to the south of Mexican plateau. They constructed p
yramids like the
Egyptians.
Floating Gardens built by the Aztecs were known
as Chinambus.
Aztecs believed in the worships of serpents
(Snakes)
The capital of Aztec was Tinochtitlans it was captured by Spanish conquerors in
1519 AD, thus
ended the Aztec Civilisation.
Most civilised of the Amarindian civilizations
was the Inca, which developed in Peru (South
America)
Inca was politically the most developed
Amarindian tribes.
Maize, Potato, Tomato, Pumpkin, Pineapple,
Ground nuts, Guava, Tobacco, Cocaine etc were
made to use for the first time by the Inca people
of Peru.
The Sun Temple at Cusco was a contribution of
the Inca Civilization.
Red Indians were the aborginals of America. They
were named so by Columbus.
Christopher Columbus discovered America in
1492.
America derived its name from Americo Vespuci,
an Italian explorer.
Copper was the first metal used by Americans.
Maize cultivation was the base of American
Civilisation.
African Civilisation
It is believed that human beings evolved in Africa.
The Portuguese were the first Europeans to reach
Africa.
City of Moro in Central Africa is known as
Berminhatam of Central Africa.
First country formed in the western part of Africa
Gold
is Ghana. Ghana is also known as the
Coast .
Islam spread to Africa in the 8th Century.
Vasco-da-Gama was the first European to reach
the Cape of Good Hope, the southern most tip of
Africa.
Bandus are the Negroes of Central and South
Africa. Bandu means humans.
The dark skinned race of Africa are called Negroes.
Swahilis are the people living in the parts ofKenya
and Tanzania. Zulus are the people living in South
Africa, belonging to the Bandu family.
Middle Ages
The attack of Roman Empire and its destruction
by the Barbarians in 455 AD marks the end of the
ancient world and the beginning of Middle Ages.
The word Barbarian means uncultured.
Early Middle Ages is known as Dark Ages . It
ended up to the 11th century.
Monasticism originated in Europe in the Middle
Ages.
In the 12th and 13th centuries there occurred several wars between Christians a
nd Muslims in Palestine. These battles are known as Crusades.
Muslims became religiously intolerant due to the
Crusades.
Crusades resulted in the spread of Islam to Europe.
Feudal System was first emerged in Europe.
The early name of feudalism was Clientage.
The word feudalism was originated from the word
fief or fued which means land given to peasant.
The structure of feudal relationship was like a
pyramid. King was on top of the pyramid and
slaves were at the bottom.
Feudalism came to an end towards AD 1000 by
the influence of christianity.
Feudalism helped to control the autocratic rule of
kings in the Middle Ages
Guilds were th merchant organisations of Europe
in the Middle Ages.
The University of Italy founded in 825 was the
first University in Europe.
Paris University was the first University in France.
Oxford University was founded in 1163 AD and
Cambridge in 1284.
Aleson Richard was the first woman to become
the Vice Chancellor of Cambridge University.
Christianity was responsibile for making the Barbarians a civilised people.
The Monastry of Monte Casino was founded by
St. Benedict.
The word Catholic means
Omnipresent .
Pope was the head of Medieval Christian Church.
The silver jubilee celebrations of the Pope John Paul
II s Pontification has been
one of the longest in the
history of the Papacy celebrated in 2003.
Pope John Paul II died on 2 April 2005.
He belonged to Poland.
Pope Pius IX was the Pope who ruled the longest
term (31 years)
John Paul II is the Pope with second longest term
(26 years).
John Paul II was the first Pope to accept the
Theory of Evolution by Charles Darwin.
John Paul II visited India twice (1986, 1999)
Crossing the Threshold of Hope
Gift and Mystery
Roman Tryptych Meditations
Rise up Let us Go ,
Memory and Identity are
the books written by Pope John Paul II.
Joseph Ratzinger of Germany who came to be
known as Benedict XVI became the 265th Pope
after the death of John Paul II.
was bo
. - Kalvin
Age of Revolutions
Thomas Jefferson
18th century is known as the Age of Enlightenment
18th century is also known as Age of Reason
Voltaire, Rousseau and Montesquieu were the
prominent philosophers who gave inspiration to
the French people.
French society on the eve of Revolution was divided into three Estates - Clergy
, Nobles and Commons.
Louis XVI was the king of France when the revolution broke out (1774-1792)
His wife was beautiful but Empty Headed lady
Mary Antoinette.
Like the Stuart kings of England, the Bourbons of
France also ruled by the Divine Right Theory of
Kingship. Louis XIV (1643 - 1715) who fully exploited the theory said I am the sta
te He also
said
flood after me
The French Parliament was known as Estates
General .
The Bastile Prison which was the symbol of
monarch s cruelty was broken by the Third Estate on 14th July 1789. Thus began the
French
Revolution.
July 14th is observed as a national holiday in
France every year in memory of this incident.
Liberty, Equality and Fraternity the slogan of the
French Revolution was given by Rousseau the
French Philosopher and the author of
The Social Contract .
The Eiffel Tower is
situated on the banks
of river Science in
Paris. It was built in
1888 by Gaustave
Eiffel.
His famous saying is
Man is born free but
everywhere he is in
chains .
Louise Phillippe was
the Emperor of France from 1830 - 1848 AD. He
shunned the traditional symbols of monarchy and
came to be known as the Citizen King .
Napolean Bonaparte (1769-1821) is known as the
Child of the French Revolution .
Napolean Bonaparte was bornin Corsica, an island in the Meditteranean sea in 17
69. He proclaimed himself the emperor of France in 1804. He
was defeated by the English in 1813 and deported
to Elba. But later he
recaptured power.
But after his final defeat in the Battle of
Water Loo he was
deported to St. Helena Island. There he
died in 1821. The government formed by
Nepolean in France
was known as Consulate. The Bank of France was established by
Napolean.
French Philosopher Rousseau is the author of
books such as Emile, Confessions, Social Contract etc.
The most important work ofMontesquieu is
The
Spirit of Laws
French Revolution resulted in the destruction of
feudalism in France.
French Revolution gave the term nation , its modern meaning.
Elysee Palace is the official residence of French
President.
Now the term of French President is five years,
earlier it was seven years.
Franc is French currency
Jacqueous Shirak is the President of France.
In 2006 there was a racial conflict between the
African immigrants and natives.
The Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution is the name given to a
series of changes that brought about a transition
from production by hand to production by maRousseau
Eiffel Tower
chine from small scale production to large scale
production, hand made goods to machine made
goods.
Industrial Revolution started in England in the
second part of the 18th century and in the first
part of the 19th century.
Industrial Revolution first influenced the Cotton
Textile Industry.
In 1733, John Kay invented the Flying Shuttle
for weaving cloth.
James Hargreaves invented the Spinnng Jenny
in 1764 (Jenny was the name of his wife)
Water Frame was invented by Richard
Archwright.
Samuel Crompton invented Mule in 1779.
Power Loom was invented byEdmund Cartwright
in 1785.
James Watt invented Steam Engine in 1769.
Safety Lamp or Davis Lamp was invented by
Humphrey Davy in 1816.
Elias Home invented sewing machine in 1846.
The Warrior was the first warship built with
iron plates.
Abraham Derby invented the method of smelting
iron with coke in 1709.
Bersemer invented the steel furnace in 1856.
First Steam Locomotive was invented by
Trevithick in 1800.
In 1814 George Stephenson invented an improved
steam locomotive called Rocket. It was finally
used in opening the first passenger railway from
Liverpool to Manchester. That is why
Stephenson is called the father of Steam Locomotive.
Steam Boat was invented by Robert Fulton in
1807.
First steam ship sailed from Glasgow to Liverpool
in 1857. A ship first crossed the Atlantic in 1833.
The method of sending message by wire was invented by Morse in 1835.
Bloody Sunday
On the 22nd of 1905 thousands of unarmed Russian workers marched to the Winter P
alace of Czar
in St.Peterburg. Their demand was to have administrative reforms. But the army f
Hong Kong became a special administrative region of China on July 1, 1997 when
the colony
was handed over by Britain to China.
Macao, which was a colony of the Portugal was
restored to China on 20th December 1999.
Shanghai is the biggest city in China. Beijing is
in the second place.
China was admitted to the UN in 1971. Now she is
a Permanent Member of the UN Security Council.
92% of the Chinese people belonged to the Han
race.
The Tianen Square in Beijing is described as the
Naval of China . The name means the gate of
heavenly peace .
The highest Court in China is the Supreme
People s Court.
China s leading newspaper is Renin Ribao
(People s Daily) of Beijing, which is the official
newspaper of Chinese Communist Party.
China is the first Asian country to launch a space
shuttle. Zhenshou V was the Chinese space
shuttle and Yang Liwei was its first space traveller.
China is the world s most populous country. It
has about a fifths of the world s population.
China has the oldest living civilisation.
Chinese were the first to make compasses, paper,
pottery, and silk.
Chinese Mandarin is the most widely spoken language of the world and it is the
mother tongue of
the largest number of people. Chinese call this
language Putoghua (Common language)
China has the world s largest fishing industry.
The Grand Canal world s longest artificially created water way extends more than
1600 Kilometers from Hangzhou in the south to Beijing in the
north.
Chinese People s Liberation Army is the world s
largest Army in number.
China is the largest producer of paddy, silk and
coal in the world.
China has the largest Communist Party in the
world.
World s largest dam Three Gorges Dam is built
across the Yangtse river in China.
China opened world s highest and longest highland railway on 1st July 2006 The Qi
nghai-Tibet
Railway (1, 1142 Km)
Karakkoram highway is the only overland connection between China and Pakistan.
Communist China s first international religious
gathering was conducted in April 2006.
In that World Buddhist Forum, Buddhists from
more than 30 countries participated.
2012 Olympics will be held in China.
Wenjiabo became the President of China.
It is for the first time the posts of President and
General Secretary of the Communist Party of China
held by two persons.
The present General Secretary of Communist
Party of China is the former PresidentJiangZemin
Den-Sia-O-Ping brought liberalist policies in
China in 1970.
troops from Kuwait. Its code name was Operation Desert Storm.
Operation Desert Fox was the continuation of
operation Desert storm.
Nelson Mandela
On 11 March 2006 Michelle Bachlet is sworn in
as Chile s first woman president.
Now there is a trend in South America that several of its countries moving to t
he communist side
of political ideology.
Australia
Harriet a 178 year old giant tortoise credited with
helping Charles Darwin pioneer the theory of evolution dies in Australia in 2006
June 22.
Australian Crocodile hunter Steve Irwin (44) died
on September 4, 2006 following a stingray blow
to the chest while filming a documentary on the
Great Barrier Reef off the coast of Port Douglas in
Queenland state.
Marsupial lions, Kangaroos as tall as trucks and
wombats the size of a rhinoceros roamed
Australias outback before being killed off by fires
it by arriving humans. The giant animals lived in
the arid Nullarbor Desert around 400,000 years
ago, but died out around 50,000 year ago, relatively shortly after the arrival o
f human settlers,
according to new fossil skeletons found in Caves.
Selected Questions
from World History
Father of History
Herodotus
Iron was accidently discovered by
Neanderthal man
Humans with similarity to the Neanderthal man
Cromagnans
Mesopotamian ruler who gave a famous code of
laws
Hammurabi
The Cunieform script was discovered by
Sumerians
Largest Pyramid of Egypt
Khufu
Large temple in ancient Egypt dedicated to Sun
God
Temple of Abusimbel
Three states of China existed in the 300 BC
Chin, Chu, Ehi
Siesmograph was discovered by
Ancient Chinese
Most important Persian ruler who lived in BC 600
Cyrus
God of Parsies or Zorastrians
Ahuramazda
Most famous ruler of ancient Athens
Pericles
Olygarchy is a form of government led by .
a group of rich people
Greek poetess who sung about love, nature and
beauty
Sappho
Latin
First university in the world was started in Paris
Which subject was known as Queen of Sciences
during the Middle Ages
Theology
Who was the immediate successor of prophet
Muhammed or first Khalifa
Abubekker
Capital of Arab Empire during th Abbsasid rule
Baghdad
Frist Industrially developed country in Asia
Japan
The Capital of Japan in the 8th Century
Nara
Ancient religion of Japan
Shintoism
Architectural style developed in France
Goethic
The mount where Saint Benedict founded his
monastery
Monte Cassino
Holy Ka aba was built by
Prophet Ebrahim
The capture of constantinople by the Suljek
Turks resulted in the decline of
Byzantine Empire
The prophet of French Revolution
Rasseau
Nationalisation of Suez Canal was done by
Col. Gamal Abdul Nazar of Egypt
Japanese Parliament is known as
Diet
Battle in which Napolean was defeated in 1815
Battle of Trafalgar
Unification of Germany was done by
Bismark
Pakistan President who was hanged to death in
1979
Sulfiker Ali Bhuto
English king who was trialed and executed
publically in 1649
Charles I
English king who signed the Magnacarta in 1215
John
Treaty which ended the Ruso-Japanese battle of
1905
Treaty of Portsmouth
Co-operative movement was started in England
in 1821 by
Robert Oven
Small Island where Columbus landed in 1492
Wattlings Island
Amerigo Vespucci who identified America belonged to
Italy
The petition submitted American colonists before king George III of England in
1774
Olive Branch Petition
The Queen who was known as Madam Deficit
Mary Antoinet (France)
Wilks Booth
Princess Diana was killed in a car accident in Paris
on 31 August 1997.
Communist leader who proclaimed war with Cuban ruler Batista in 1958
Fidel Castro
The Great fire of London was in the year 1666.
Chinese President who adopted christianity in
1980
Chiang Kaishek
Mussolini was captured and killed at
Como
Founder of Comintang Party Dr. Sunyat Sen
Fill in the Blanks
1. The temperature at which the
air is fully saturated is called
.............
2. The type of soil typically
formed under tropical monsoon condition is .............
3. The bottom of a river is called
.............
4. The waves which pass
through the core of the earth
is .............
5. Ocean covers ............. part of
the earth s surface
6. A vent in the ground of a
volcanic area which gives off
volcanic hot gases is known
as .............
7. The narrow contact zone of
land, water and air which
contains all forms of life is
called .............
8. Maps showing different
countries and states of the
world with their boundaries
are called .............
9. Virunga National Park in
Congo is famous for .............
10. ............. is the largest island in
the world.
11. The Trans-Siberian Railway
(8960 km) connects ......... in
the west to .......... in the east.
12. Humbolt ocean current is in
............. ocean.
13. The leeward side of a
mountain which does not
receive rain is known as the
.............
14. The study of fossils is .............
15. ............. is the propounder of
the continental drift theory.
16. The rainfall caused due to the
presence of mountains in the
way of winds is called .............
17. Isochrones are lines joining
places with equal .............
18. Leading producer of cement
is .............
19. Cadiz, in Spain, is famous for
.............
20. Trees shed their leaves in
winter season to .............
21. ............. is the technique
applied to measure the depth
of the sea.
22. Winter rains in north-western
India are caused by ..............
23. The western disturbances
causing winter rains in
northern India originate in
.............
24. John s disease affects .............
25. The disease, green ear ,
affects .............
26. ............. are nodules on the sea
bed containing a variety of
minerals.
27. The Thar Desert believed to be
expanding. The most suitable
way to check it would be by
.............
28. ............. consists of masses of
ice in layers one above the
other.
29. ............. Canal lies on the
world s largest of trade routes
connecting Europe and Far East.
30. Strait of Malacca separates
............ and ..........
31. ............. grasses are known as
elephant grasses.
32. The river Tsangpo (River
Brahmaputra) flows through
............. before entering India.
33. The most valuable cashcrop
of Brazil is .............
34. The country in which the
greatest waterfall is situated
.............
Answers
1. Dew Point
2. Alluvial
3. Bed
4. P-waves (Primary Waves)
5. 2/3rd
6. Fumarole
7. Biosphere
8. Political maps
9. Mountain Gorillas
10. Green land
11. Leningrad, Omsk
12. Pacific
13. rain - shadow area
14. Paleontology
15. Alfred Wegner
16. Orographic rain
17. travelling time from a point
18. USA
19. Cork
20. conserve water
21. Echo-sounding
22. western disturbances
23. The Mediterranean region
24. cattles
25. bajra
26. Potato ores
27. afforestation
28. Hail
29. The Suez
30. Sumatra and Malaysia
31. Savanna
32. Tibet
33. Coffee
34. Zaire (Boyomar falls)
Answer in a Word or
Sentence
1. What is called the study of
lakes and ponds?
2. Which gas in the atmosphere
absorbs ultraviolet rays?
3. Which is the longest river of
Asia?
4. Name the lowest point in
Europe?
5. The highest peak in Hindukush mountain range is
6. Which is the largest reef in the
world?
7. Which is the longest fresh
water lake in the world?
8. Ferrel s Law is concerned
with
9. Which is the largest inland
sea in the world?
10. In which country is Kalahari
desert located?
11. Which is the world s largest
River Barrage?
12. Which is the largest river
island in the world?
13. Which river flows into the
Dead Sea?
14. Which is the deepest lake in
the world?
15. In which ocean is the island
Diego Garcia situated?
16. World s largest concrete dam
17. Which is the only place in the
world where Browantlered
Deer is found?
18. Which famous volcano is
known as the Bonfire of
Europe ?
19. Which is the highest peak in
Aravalli range?
20. Which is the largest country
in South America?
local time.
Standard Time: If every place
were to use its own local time
that would cause confusion in
administration and other
activities; so the local time of a
place generally in the middle of
the country, is used everywhere
in that country as the Standard
Time of that country and is taken
to be uniform throughout.
Standard Time of India is the
local time of a place near
Allahabad situated at 82o E
longitude. Some countries on
account of their distances have
more than one standard time.
Russia has 11 such different
timings.
Savanna
A savanna or savannah is a tropical or subtropical woodland
ecosystem. Savannas are characterised by the trees being sufficiently
small or widely spaced so that the canopy does not close. It is often
believed that savannas are characterized by widely spaced, scattered
trees, however in many savanna communities tree densities are
higher and trees are more regularly spaced than in forest
communities.
The open canopy allows sufficient light to reach the ground to
support an unbroken herbaceous layer consisting primarily of C4
grasses. Savannas are also characterised by seasonal water
availability, with the majority of rainfall being confined to one season
of the year. Savannas can be associated with several types of biomes.
Savannas are frequently seen as a transitional zone, occurring
between forest regions and desert regions.
Important Terms in
Geography
? Anticlines and Synclines: An
anticline is a fold with strata
sloping downwards on both
sides from a common crest to
form an arch. The top of the
arch, being pressed upward
is the loosest and weakest
part and as such is quickly
eroded. A syncline is a low
trough like area in bedrock
with rocks inclined together
from opposite sides. the rocks
at the lowest part are under
great pressure from all sides;
they become compact and
hard and erode slowly.
? Atoll: A coral reef in the shape
of a horse shoe or ring with a
lagoon in the centre, e.g.
Murora Atoll in the Pacific
Ocean.
? Asthenosphere: Soft
semifluid layer of rock on
19. 5-6
20. Genetically modified
Answer in a Word
1. Vaccine for influenza has
been discovered by:
2. Penicillin was discovered by:
3. Oncology is the study of :
4. The number of chromosomes
in a normal human body cell is:
5. Who is known as the father
of Genetics?
6. The average length of human
pregnancy is:
7. Colour vision is made
possible by the cells in the
retina called:
8. The naturally occuring
anticoagulant in the human
body is:
9. The cellular energy is made
available in the form of:
10. Osteomalacia symptomised
by bone softening is due to the
deficiency of:
11. 1 gm of carbohydrate food
gives energy which is about :
Answers
1. Salk,
2. Alexander Fleming
3. Cancer
4. 46
5. Gregor Johann Mendel
6. 36-38 weeks
7. cone cells
8. Heparin
9. ATP
10. Vitamin D
11. 4.2 k.cal.
The nervous system is a highly
specialized tissue network
whose principal component
are neurons. These cells are
interconnected to each other in
a complex arrange, and have
the property of conducting,
using electrochemical signals,
a great variety of stimuli within
the nervous tissue as well as
from and towards most of the
other tissues. Thus, neurons
coordinate multiple functions
in organisms. The classification of the nervous system
is mostly similar in humans as
in other vertebrates.
Nervous system
brian
Cerebellum
Spinal cord
Intercostal
Nerves
Subcostal nerve
Lumbar
plexus
Sacral
plexus
Formal nerve
Pudendal nerve
Sciatic nerve
Muscular branches
of femoral nerve
Saphenous nerve
Tibial nerve
Superficial peroneal
nerve
Deep peroneal nerve
Common peroneal
nerve
Ulnar nerve
Obturator
nerve
Genitofernoral
nerve
Median nerve
liohypogastic
nerve
Musculocutaneous
nerve
Brachial plexus
Name the Following
1. Who is the father of cloning?
2. Who invented oral polio
vaccine?
3. Name the disease which
created panic in Asian
countries in 2003.
4. Name the first transgenic
crop sown in India.
5. What is exobiology?
6. Write the scientific name of
coconut.
7. Name the largest flower in the
world?
8. World Environment Day is
observed on
9. National Institute of
Communicable diseases is
located at
10. Name the inventor of mercury
thermometer.
11. Name the scientist who
prepared smallpox vaccine
first.
12. The shortest bone in the
human body is
13. Name the disease caused by
the deficiency of vitamin C.
14. Name the instrument used to
determine altitude.
Answers
1. Ian Wilmut
2. Albert Sabin
3. Avian Flu
4. Bt. Cotton
5. Study of life in outerspace
6. Cocus nucifera
7. Rufflesia
8. June 5
9. New Delhi
10. Fahrenheit
11. Edward Jenner
12. Stapes
13. Scurvy
14. Altimeter.
Short Answer Questions
1. What is Tissue Culture?
2. What are infectious diseases?
3. What is Cloning?
4. What are anaesthetics ?
5. It is dangerous to sleep in a
closed room with coal fire in
it. Why ?
6. How are identical twins born ?
7. How is acid rain caused ?
8. What do you mean by test
tube baby?
O is
9. Why blood group
called a universal donor?
10. Why do we perspire on a hot
day ?
11. Describe briefly the functions
of liver.
12. What is Mutation?
13. What is a greenhouse ?
14. What is inoculation ?
15. What are contagious diseases?
16. Mitochondria are called
Power house of the cell.
Why?
17. What is fertilizer?
18. What is field capacity of
water ?
19. What is Photosynthesis?
20. What is Biological Oxygen
Demand (BOD)
21. Why are earthworms
regarded as a great friend of
the farmers?
22. What is soil profile?
23. What is food chain?
24. Pituitary gland is also called
master gland. Why?
25. Why are chromosomes called
heriditary vehicles?
26. What is a gene?
27. What is Balanced Diet?
28. What is pace maker?
29. What is blood pressure?
30. Why excess water must be
removed from the body by any
means?
31. What is leukemia?
32. What is meningitis?
33. What is Metabolism?
34. What is neurosis?
35. What is haemoglobin?
36. What is hibernation?
37. What are hormones?
38. What is autopsy?
39. What is B.C.G.?
40. What is Bile?
41. What is Biological Warfare
42. What is colour blindness?
43. What is disinfectant?
44. What are proteins?
45. Give the three main
constituents of blood.
46. What is aspirin?
47. What is protoplasm?
48. What are the functions of
pituitary gland?
Days to remember
World Environment day - 5th June
Hroshima Day - August 6
Nagasaki Day - August 9
Ozone day - September 16
National Pollution Prevention Day - December 2
Bhopal Gas Disaster Day - December 3 1984
49. What is carbon cycle in
biology?
50. What are fossils?
51. What is Gene Therapy?
52. What is Noise Pollution?
53. Amniocentesis
54. Biodegradation
55. Endoscopes
56. Transgenic Organism
57. Biochips
58. Hepatitis - B
59. Acquired Immuno Deficiency
Syndrome (AIDS)
60. Blood Group
61. Food Chain
62. Pasteurization
63. Blood count
64. Bonsai
65. How is a pearl formed?
66. First-aid
67. Plastic surgery
68. Hydrophobia
69. What is Radiocarbon dating?
70. What are Bio-Fertilizers?
71. What is GM Crop?
72. What is National Rural
Health Missionb
73. What is Chikunguniya? How
it can be Prevented?
74. What is Germ theory of
disease?
water.
69. The method of finding out the
age of fossils by determining
the amount of radiocarbon
(C14) remaining in them. Since
the half life of C14 is 5,720
years, its amount is reduced
to half after so many years
and, thus, the age of a fossil
can be determined.
70. Bio-fertilizers are those
fertilizers in which organic
matters are used.
Bio-Fertilizers are the most
advanced bio-technology
necessary to support developing organic agriculture,
sustainable agriculture, green
agriculture and nonpollution agriculture. This
Bio-organic fertilizer can
increase the output, improve
the quality and it is
responsible for agriculture
environment. Today, it has
been widely used with
excellent results in all kinds of
plants and several countries.
71. These are the crops with
genetic material from another
organism. Genetic materials
are introduced in it for the
desired qualities Bt cotton
was the India s first GM crop
with Bollworm resistant.
Genetic engineering allows
scientist to develop such
plants whch have resistance
towards diseases, pests and
stress like drought or heat. It
can also be used to keep
vegetables fresh for long
periods with increased
nutritive value.
72. The NRHM has following
objectives:
(a) The Mission adopts a
synergistic approach by
relating health to determinants of good health viz.
segments of nutrition,
sanitation, hygiene and safe
drinking water.
(b) It also aims at mainstreaming the Indian systems
of medicine to facilitate health
care.
(c) To ensure community
participation and ownership
of assets, induction of
management and financial
personnel into district health
system, and operationalizing
community health centres
often protection.
can be
It
biotechnology.
? Explant: In tissue culture,
part of plant to be cultured.
? Radon: A rare radio active
gaseous element now found
to be emitted from several
mineral ingredients causing
leukemia, brain tumours and
kidney cancers.
? Biodegradable plastic: It is
being developed from low
density polyethylene mixed
with starch. The new plastic
takes only two months to
degrade inside the soil.
In the human body, the heart is usually situated in
the middle of the thorax with the largest part of the
heart slightly offset to the left (although sometimes
it is on the right, see dextrocardia), underneath the
Anterior (frontal) view of the opened heart.
superior vena cava
(blood from the body)
Pulmonary artery
to right lung
Pulmonary veins
from right lung
Right
atrium
Aortic
valve
Tricuspid
valve
Right ventricle
Inferior vena cava
(blood from the body)
Aorta
(blood to
the body)
Pulmonary artery
(to left lung)
Pulmonary veins
(from left lung)
left
atrium
Pulmonary
valve
Mitral
valve
Left
ventricle
Septum
breastbone. The heart is usually felt to be on the
left side because the left heart (left ventricle) is
stronger (it pumps to all body parts). The left
lung is smaller than the right lung because the
heart occupies more of the left hemithorax. The
heart is enclosed by a sac known as the
pericardium and is surrounded by the lungs.
The pericardium comprises two parts: the
fibrous pericardium, made of dense fibrous
24. Electrons
25. Tungsten
26. Aluminium
27. Titanium
28. Electrical
29. Manometer
30. Scalar quantities
31. Acceleration
32. humidity
33. 4o C
34. zero
35. 11.2 km/s or 7 miles/s
36. cohesion
37. potential energy
38. motion
39. energy
40. Super fluids
41. Venturimeter
42. decreases
43. rise
44. surface tension
45. Acoustics
46. supersonic
47. phonogram
48. Newton s third law of motion.
49. Angstrom
50. Light year
51. 1.825
52. 2.54
53. 0.914
54. 0.3048
55. 1.609
56. Calorie
57. 100
58. 2.471
Answer in a Word
1. Name the instrument used to
measure the strength of an
electric current
2. Which metal is called the
metal of future?
3. Which is the first nuclear
research reactor of India?
4. Barometer was invented by 5. Intensity of an earthquake is
measured by6. Raman effect is related with
the7. The instrument which is
used to measure very high
temperatures 8. The instrument which detects
the presence of infrared rays
is 9. Name the quantity which
remains same before and after
the immersion of two objects
of same weights.
10. Name the energy possessed
by the water when it is collected in the reservoir of a dam?
11. Cohesion
12. Temperature scales
13. Buoyancy
14. Photo electric effect
15. Fluorescence
16. Super conductivity
17. Super fluidity
18. Piezoelectric effect
19. Remote Control System
20. Viscosity
21. Phosphorescence
22. Teflon
23. Ultrasonics
Tungsten
Tungsten also called wolfram is a chemical element that has the
symbol W (German: wolfram) and atomic number 74. A very hard,
heavy, steel-gray to white transition metal, tungsten is found in
several ores including wolframite and scheelite and is remarkable
for its robust physical properties, especially the fact that it has the
highest melting point of all the non-alloyed metals and the second
highest of all the elements after carbon. The pure form is used mainly
in electrical applications but its many compounds and alloys are
widely used in many applications, most notably in light bulb
filaments, in X-ray tubes (as both the filament and target), and in
superalloys. Tungsten is the only metal from the third transition
series that is known to occur in biomolecules.
24. Black Box
25. Escape Velocity
26. Quautum Theory
Answers to the short notes
1. A Laser (Light Amplification
by Stimulated Emission of
Radiation) is an optical
source that emits photons in
a coherent beam. Laser light
is typically near-monochromatic, i.e. consisting of a
single wavelength, and
emitted in a narrow beam.
This is in contrast to common
light sources, such as the
incandescent light bulb,
which emit incoherent
photons in almost all
directions, usually over a
wide spectrum of wavelengths.
In 1916, Albert Einstein laid
the foundation for the
invention of the laser, while
the first working laser was
made by Theodore H.
Maiman in 1960.
2. EDUSAT programme is
aimed to provide distance
education service using
advanced space technology
and ground technology of
convergence.
3. Space-capsule Recovery
Experiment (SRE) is intended
had 100 for the freezing point of water and 0 for the boiling point. The
scale was reversed by Carolus Linnaeus in 1745, to how it is today.
controlled quantity. Most
controlling quantities send
signals to the controlled
quantity through infrared rays
or radio waves or lasers or ultra
sonic waves. The common
TV/VCR remote control
systems use infrared pulses.
20. The property of a liquid by virtue
of which it offers a resistance to
the flow is called viscosity.
Viscosity is internal friction of
a fluid. Viscosity is due to the
cohesive forces between the
molecules of the liquid. Greater
the cohesion or cohesive forces
between the molecules of a
liquid, larger is the opposition
of the liquid. Thus honey which
has more cohesive forces than
water displays greater viscosity
than water
21. It is the form of luminescence
in which a substance emits
light of higher wavelength
after absorbing an electromagnetic radiation. Phosphorescence may continue even
after the source of light is cut
off.
22. An organic substance made
by the polymerisation of
tetrafluoroethane, CF
2= CF2.
The chemical name of teflon
is polytetra fluoroethane.
Because of its properties high
resistance to heat, chemical
etc. It is used to coat non-stick
cooking materials, electrical
insulation etc.
23. The Science of sound waves
of frequency greater than the
audible range, i.e., greater
than 20,000 Hz (20 KHz). The
vibrations of certain crystals
(quartz, zinc oxide, barium
litanate etc) under the
influence of an applied
alternating voltage produces
ultrasound or ultrasonic
waves up to well above 20
KHz. In the medical field,
ultrasound is used to detect
and diagnose tumours,
gallstones, heart diseases,
distinguish between diseased
and healthy tissues, monitor
the development of the foetus,
becomes quicker.
? We bring our hands close to
mouth while shouting to
somebody at a distance.
Why?
By bringing the hands close
to our mouth, the sound
energy is not allowed to
spread in all directions,
rather being made unidirectional (i.e. directed in a
particular direction). Hence
the sound produced becomes
louder.
? Why do we lean forward
while climbing a hill ?
Leaning forward enables us
to keep the line passing
through the centre of gravity
vertically downward, within
our feet, and thus the
equilibrium is kept stable.
? Why are lightning conductors fixed at the top of high
buildings ?
When an electric discharge
takes place from the cloud, the
lightning conductor provides
it an easy conducting path to
the earth without damaging
the building.
? Why does a parachute must
have a hole ?
A hole in the centre of
parachute is made to avoid
oscillation of the parachute
while descending owing to
the changing currents of
wind. The hole allows the air
to run out of the parachute
regularly.
? How does a flute produce
different sound notes?
A flute produces different
sound notes because air
particles passing through it
are vibrated with different
frequencies with the closing
and opening of the holes.
? Why do we use a fuse in an
electric circuit?
A fuse is used in an electric
circuit because when excess
current flows through the
circuit the fuse melts and
breaks the circuit and
prevents the damage to any
of the electrical goods used.
? What causes wind ?
Winds are caused by the
unequal heating of the earth s
surface and rotation of earth.
of hearts.
? Commutator : An instrument
to change or reverse the
direction of an electric current.
? Cinematograph : Instrument
used to reflect the image of
picture on a screen.
? Compass needle : For knowing approximately the northsouth direction of a place
.
? Drinkers apparatus : To help
breathing in infantile
paralysis.
? Electro encephalo graph
(EEG) : It is a technique of
recording and interpreting
the electrical activity of brain.
Records of the electrical
activity of the brain, brain
waves are called electro
encephalograms.
? Electroscope : To detect the
presence of electric charge.
? Eudiometer : It is a glass tube
for measuring volume
changes in chemical reactions
between gases.
? Galvanometer : For measuring
currents of small magnitude.
? G.M. counter : For detecting
the presence of radiation and
counting certain atomic
particles.
? Gravimeter : For recording
measurement under water
and to determine the
presence of oil deposits under
water.
? Hydrometer : To calculate the
specific gravity of liquids.
? Hydrophone : For recording
sound beneath water.
? Hygrometer : For measuring
humidity in air.
? Lactometer : To find out the
purity of milk.
? Magnetometer : To measure
the intensity of earth s
magnetic field.
? Microphone : Used to convert
sound waves to electrical
vibrations.
? Microtome : Used to cut an
object into thin parts for
microscopic inspection.
? Periscope: It is used usually
by the crew of a submarine to
survey the ships etc., on the
surface of the sea while the
submarine is under water. It
also enables the sailors to
? Venturimeter: It is a device
based on Bernoulli's theorm,
for measuring the quantity of
a liquid flowing through the
pipe.
? Wireless : It is an instrument
which can send messages
from one place to another
without the use of wire.
Important Terms
? Absolute Zero: It is the lowest
temperature theoretically
possible and is equal to ( 273o C).
At absolute zero all molecular
motion comes to a stop.
? Alternating current : It is an
electric current that periodically reverses its direction
in the circuit, with a frequency
independent of the constants
of the circuit.
? Boiling point : Boiling point
is the temperature of a liquid
at which visible evaporation
occurs throughout the bulk of
the liquid and at which the
vapour pressure of the liquid
equals the external atmospheric pressure. It is the
temperature at which liquid
and vapour can exist together
in equilibrium at a given
pressure.
? Centripetal force : The inward
force that keeps body, such
as a satellite, moving in a
circular path. The centripetal
force is directed towards the
centre.
? Conduction : It is the process
in which heat or electrical
energy is transmitted from
one particle to another nearby
particles without actual
motion of the particles. In
solids, heat is transmitted by
conduction.
? Convection : It is a process by
which heat is transferred by
actual motion of the particles
themselves. In liquid and
gases, heat is transmitted by
convection.
? Critical Temperature : The
temperature above which a
gas cannot be liquefied, no
matter how great a pressure
is exerted.
? Doppler effect : It is the
change in frequency of a wave
(sound or light) due to the
motion of the source or
May 3
World Press Freedom Day
May 15 International Day of Families
May 22 International Day for Biological
Diversity
May 23 World Turtle Day
May 29 International Day of UN
Peacekeepers
May 31 World No-Tobacco Day
First Tuesday of May
World Asthma Day
Second Saturday of May World Fair Trade
Day
Second Sunday of May Mother's Day
A weekend in May World Migratory Bird
Day
June 1 International Children's Day
June 5 World Environment Day
June 8 World Oceans Day
June 12
World Day Against Child Labour
June 14 World Blood Donor Day
June 17 World Day to Combat
Desertification and Drought
June 18 Autistic Pride Day
June 20 World Refugee Day
June 21 World Music Day
June 23 International Widow's Day
3rd Sunday of June Fathers' Day
July 11
World Population Day
July 12 Malala Yousafzai Day
July 17 - World Day for International Justice
July 18
Nelson Mandela International Day
July 28 World Hepatitis Day
July 29 International Tiger Day
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August 12 International Youth Day
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August 29 International Day against Nuclear
Tests
September 8 International Literacy Day
September 15 International Day of
Democracy
September 16 International Day for the
Preservation of the Ozone Layer
September 21 International Day of Peace
September 27 World Tourism Day
September 28 World Rabies Day
September 29 World Heart Day
October 1
International Day of Older
Persons
October 1 World Vegetarian Day
October 2 International Day of NonViolence
October 2 World Cerebral Palsy Day
October 4 World Animal Day
October 5 World Teachers' Day
October 9 World Post Day
October 11 International Day of the Girl
Child
October 16 World Food Day
October 24 United Nations Day
November 12
November 14
November 16
Tolerance
November 17
2010 2020
United Nations Decade for
Deserts and the Fight Against Desertification
2011 2020
United Nations Decade on
Biodiversity
2011 2020
United Nations Decade of Action
for Road Safety
2014 2024
United Nations Decade of
Sustainable Energy for All
2015 2024
International Decade for People
of African Descent
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION & HEADQUARTERS
A
African Development Bank ADB - Abidjan (Cote d Ivoire)
Asian Clearing Union ACU - Tehran
Asian Development Bank ADB Manila
C
Commonwealth Foundation - London
E
European Council EU - Brussels, Belgium
F
Food and Agriculture Organization FAO - Rome
I
International Atomic Energy Authority IAEA - Vienna
International Bank for Reconstruction and Development IBRD - Washington
International Civil Aviation Organization ICAO - Montreal
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International Chamber of Commerce - Paris
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International Labor Organization ILO - Geneva
International Maritime Organization IMO - London
International Monetary Fund IMF - Washington
International Organization of Supreme Audit Institutions (INTOSAI) - Vienna, Aus
tria
International Criminal Police Organization InterPol - Lyon, France
International Telecommunications Union ITU - Geneva
N
North Atlantic Treaty Organization NATO - Brussels, Belgium
Shanghai, China
New Development Bank (BRICS Bank)
S
South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation SAARC Kathmandu (Nepal)
U
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization UNESCO - Paris
Universal Postal Union UPU - Berne
United Nations UN - New York
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United Nations International Children s Emergency Fund UNICEF - New York
W
West African Economic Community WAEC - Ouagadougou
World Customs Organization (WCO) - Brussels, Belgium
World Health Organization WHO - Geneva
World Intellectual Property Organization WIPO
Geneva
Countries and Capital PDF by ExamPundit.in
A
Afghanistan - Kabul
Albania - Tirana
Algeria - Algiers
Andorra - Andorra la Vella
Angola - Luanda
Antigua & Barbuda - Saint
John's
Argentina - Buenos Aires
Armenia - Yerevan
Australia - Canberra
Austria - Vienna
Azerbaijan - Baku
B
Bahamas - Nassau
Bahrain - Al-Manamah
Bangladesh - Dhaka
Barbados - Bridgetown
Belarus - Minsk
Belgium - Brussels
Belize - Belmopan
Bhutan - Thimphu
Bosnia & Herzegovina Sarajevo
Botswana - Gaborone
Brazil - Brasilia
Brunei - Bandar Seri
Begawan
Bulgaria - Sofia
Burkina Faso Ouagadougou
Bujumbura
Burundi
C
Cambodia - Phnom Penh
Cameroon - Yaounde
Canada - Ottawa
Cape Verde - Praia
Central African Republic Bangui
Chad - N'Djamena
Chile - Santiago
China - Beijing
Colombia - Bogota
Comoros - Moroni
Congo - Brazzaville
Costa Rica - San Jose
Cote d'Ivoire - Abidjan
Croatia - Zagreb
Cuba - Havana
Cyprus - Nicosia
Czech Republic - Prague
D
Denmark - Copenhagen
Djibouti - Djibouti City
Dominica - Roseau
Dominican Republic - Santo
Domingo
Democratic Republic of the
Congo - Kinshasa
E
East Timor - Dili
Ecuador - Quito
Egypt - Cairo
El Salvador - San Salvador
Equatorial Guinea - Malabo
Eritrea - Asmara
Estonia - Tallinn
Ethiopia - Addis Ababa
F
Fiji - Suva
Finland - Helsinki
France - Paris
G
Gabon - Libreville
Gambia - Banjul
Georgia - Tbilisi
Germany - Berlin
Ghana - Accra
Greece - Athens
Grenada - Saint George's
Guatemala - Guatemala City
Guinea - Conakry
Guyana - Georgetown
H
Haiti - Port-au-Prince
Honduras - Tegucigalpa
Hungary - Budapest
I
Iceland - Reykjavik
India - New Delhi
Indonesia - Jakarta
Iran - Tehran
Countries and Capital PDF by ExamPundit.in
Iraq - Baghdad
Ireland - Dublin
Israel - Jerusalem
Rome
Italy
J
Jamaica - Kingston
Japan - Tokyo
Jordan - Amman
K
Kazakhstan - Astana
Kenya - Nairobi
Kiribati - Tarawa Atoll
Korea North - Pyongyang
Korea South - Seoul
Kosovo - Pristina
Kuwait - Kuwait City
Kyrgyzstan - Bishkek
L
Laos - Vientiane
Latvia - Riga
Lebanon - Beirut
Lesotho - Maseru
Liberia - Monrovia
Libya - Tripoli
Liechtenstein - Vaduz
Lithuania - Vilnius
Luxembourg - Luxembourg
M
Macedonia - Skopje
Madagascar - Antananarivo
Malawi - Lilongwe
Malaysia - Kuala Lumpur
Maldives - Male
Mali - Bamako
Malta - Valletta
Marshall Islands - Majuro
Mauritania - Nouakchott
Mauritius - Port Louis
Mexico - Mexico City
Micronesia - Palikir
Moldova - Chisinau
Monaco - Monaco
Mongolia - Ulaanbaatar
Montenegro - Podgorica
Morocco - Rabat
Mozambique - Maputo
Myanmar (Burma) Rangoon (Yangon); Nay Pyi
Taw (Administrative)
N
Namibia - Windhoek
Nepal - Kathmandu
Netherlands - Amsterdam
New Zealand - Wellington
Nicaragua - Managua
Niger - Niamey
Nigeria - Abuja
Norway - Oslo
O
Oman - Muscat
P
Pakistan - Islamabad
Palau - Melekeok
Palestinian State
Ramallah(Administrative) &
Jerusalem(Claimed)
Panama - Panama City
Papua New Guinea - Port
Moresby
Paraguay - Asuncion
Peru - Lima
Philippines - Manila
Poland - Warsaw
Portugal - Lisbon
Q
Qatar - Doha
R
Romania - Bucharest
Russia - Moscow
Rwanda - Kigali
S
Saint Lucia - Castries
Saudi Arabia - Riyadh
Senegal - Dakar
Serbia - Belgrade
Seychelles - Victoria
Sierra Leone - Freetown
Singapore - Singapore
Slovakia - Bratislava
Slovenia - Ljubljana
Solomon Islands - Honiara
Egypt : Pound
F
France : Euro
G
Germany : Euro
H
Hong Kong : Dollar
I
India : Rupee
Indonesia : Rupiah
Iran : Rial
Iraq : Dinar
J
Japan : Yen
L
Lithuania : Euro
Libya : Dinar
M
Malaysia : Ringgit
Maldives : Rufiyaa
Mexico : Peso
N
Nepal : Rupee
Netherlands : Euro
Norway : Krone
North Korea : Won
P
Pakistan : Rupee
Philippines : Peso
Portugal : Euro
Q
Qatar : Riyal
R
Romania : Leu
Russia : Ruble
S
Saudi Arabia : Riyal
Singapore : Dollar
South Africa : Rand
South Korea : Won
Sri Lanka : Rupee
Switzerland : Franc
Syria : Pound
T
Thailand : Baht
Turkey : Lira
U
Ukraine : Hryvnia
UAE : Dirham
UK : Pound
USA : Dollar
V
Vatican City : Euro
Z
Zimbabwe : Dollar