Q.1. The city of Calcutta in the 19th century India amazed and confused writers and many others because :
(a) It was city full of opportunities — for trade and commerce, education and jobs
(b) It was full of cheats, poverty, poor quality housing, confusion of caste, and gender and religious identities in the city
(c) It offered a series of contrasting images and experiences – wealth and poverty, splendour and dirt, opportunities and disappointments
(d) All of these
Ans. (d)
Q.2. Which of the following statements is/are true about ancient cities?
(a) Ancient cities developed only along the rivers
(b) Ancient cities developed when an increase in food supplies made it possible to support a wide range of non-food producers
(c) Ancient cities supported social groups such as artisans, merchants and priests
(d) All of these
Ans. (d)
Q.3. Which of the following industries did not exist in London before the First World War?
(a) Clothing and footwear, wood and furniture
(b) Metals and engineering, printing and stationery
(c) Precision products like surgical instruments, watches, objects of precious metals
(d) Motor cars and electrical goods
Ans. (d)
Q.4. The map shows the growth of London and its population in four different areas. The reasons a
(a) Increase in factories, and number of industries like motor cars and electrical goods
(b) Employment of larger number of people in industries and factories
(c) Women and children also employed in factories
(d) All the above
Ans. (d)
Q.5. Who were the philanthropists?
(a) People who wanted to stop crime, and work for social upliftment
(b) People who worked for social upliftment and charity, donating time and money for the purpose
(c) People who wanted a hard-working, orderly labour force
(d) People who worried about law and order
Ans. (b)
Q.6. Who was Charles Booth and what is he known for?
(a) A rich merchant who made a social survey of London workers
(b) A philanthropist who worked for the poor in London
(c) A Liverpool shipowner who conducted the first social survey of low-skilled workers in
East End of London, in 1887
(d) A writer on the social conditions in London in the 19th century
Ans. (c)
Q.7. Which of the following were the features of urban life in the cities in the 19th century?
(a) Excessive noise pollution
(b) Air and water pollution due to large quantities of refuse and waste products
(c) Destruction of natural features or transformation due to factories, housing and other institutions
(d) All the above
Ans. (d)
Q.8. People in industrial cities believed that the black fog created :
(a) Bad tempers, smoke-related illnesses and dirty clothes
(b) Black skies and black vegetables
(c) Air pollution
(d) Serious ecological problems
Ans. (a)
Q.9. ‘Temperance Movement’ was :
(a) An attempt by the social reformers aimed at reducing consumption of alcoholic drinks amongst the upper classes
(b) A reform movement led by the rich to stop drinking on the streets
(c) A middle-class led social reform movement in Britain and USA, aimed at reducing alcoholism amongst the working classes
(d) None of these
Ans. (c)
Q.10. Which of the following statements are correct about Charles Booth’s survey?
(a) The poor were expected to die “in a workhouse, hospital or lunatic asylum”
(b) The life expectancy of the poor was 29 years, the gentry and middle-class had life expectancy of 55 years
(c) One-fifth population of London (1 million Londoners) were very poor
(d) All the above
Ans. (d)
Q.11. How can we prove the popularity of the underground railway in London?
(a) By newspapers praising its services
(b) By increase in the number of passengers travelling in them, losing their fear of travelling underground
(c) On 10th January 1863, 10,000 passengers were carried in trains running every ten minutes, by 1880, 40 million passengers were carried a year.
(d) Both (b) and (c)
Ans. (d)
Q.12. The underground railway was not very popular in the beginning. The reasons were :
(a) They were considered a menace to health – a mixture of sulphur, coal, dust and foul fumes
(b) To make two miles of railway, 900 houses had to be destroyed; this led to a massive
displacement of the poor
(c) Many writers like Charles Dicknes thought that the iron monsters added to the mess and unhealthiness
(d) All the above
Ans. (d)
Q.13. ‘Individualism’ is a theory which promotes :
(a) A new spirit among men and women, freedom from collective values
(b) The liberty, rights or independent action of the individual rather that of the community
(c) Superiority of men over women
(d) Public space as a male preserve and domestic sphere as the proper place for women
Ans. (b)
Q.14. The congestion in the 19th century industrial city led to a yearning for :
(a) A clean country air, a holiday home in the countryside for the rich
(b) Making ‘new lungs’, for the city, a Green Belt around London
(c) Building of the garden city, with common gender spaces, beautiful views, full of plants and trees
(d) All the above
Ans. (d)
Q.15. The working class people spent their holidays and leisure time in the late 18th century :
(a) In singing and dancing at home
(b) Meeting in pubs for a drink, exchanging news and sometimes organising a political action
(c) By getting drunk in streets and indulging in fights
(d) In visiting museums
Ans. (b)
Q.16. The various steps taken to clear up London were :
(a) Large blocks of apartments were built, like in Berlin and New York
(b) Localities were decongested and open spaces were left to reduce the pollution and, constructing landscape of the city.
(c) Rent control was introduced during the First World War
(d) All the above
Ans. (d)
Q.17. Name the entertainment which became the great mass entertainment for mixed audiences by the early 20th century
(a) Holidays by the seaside (b) Travelling to historical places in England
(c) The cinema (d) The theatre
Ans. (c)
Q.18. Presidency cities in India in the early 19th century were
(a) Bombay, Calcutta and Madras (b) Bengal, Gujarat and Bombay
(c) Delhi, Bengal and Bombay (d) Bombay, Gujarat and Madras
Ans. (a)
Q.19. The premier city in India in the 19th century was
(a) Calcutta (b) Madras (c) Bombay (d) Surat
Ans. (c)
Q.20. Bombay came under the control of the British when
(a) King Charles II, the king of Britain, married the Portuguese princess and Bombay was given as a part of dowry to England in 1661
(b) The British defeated the Portuguese in India and took away Bombay from them
(c) The Portuguese sold it to the British East India Company
(d) The Portuguese exchanged Bombay with the British possession of Diu
Ans. (a)
Q.21. The main reasons why people migrated to Bombay in the 19th century were :
(a) Bombay became the capital of the Bombay presidency in 1819
(b) The growth of trade in cotton and opium, led to a large number of artisans, traders and bankers and shopkeepers settling in Bombay
(c) The establishment of textile mills in 1864, invited fresh migrants to Bombay
(d) Both (b) and (c)
Ans. (d)
Q.22. The two calamities which affected Bombay in the late 19th century were :
(a) Lack of essential amenities like space and food
(b) The famine of Kutch (1888-89) and the plague of 1898 (c) A flood of migrants created panic, alarm and a crisis
(d) The ruthless behaviour of the district authorities and the flood of migrants
Ans. (b)
Q.23. Which statement does not describe correctly conditions in a chawl?
(a) People of every caste and community lived amicably in the chawls
(b) People had to keep the windows of their rooms closed, due to proximity of filthy gutters, privies, buffalo stables etc.
(c) One room tenements, because of high rents, are shared by relatives, or caste fellows
(d) Streets were used for cooking, washing, sleeping and for different types of leisure activities
Ans. (a)
Q.24. How could the problem of scarcity of land in Bombay be solved?
(a) By building high-rise buildings
(b) Through population control
(c) Through massive reclamation projects
(d) By stopping migration to Bombay and sending people to their original homes
Ans. (c)
Q.25. “Reclamation” means :
(a) To take back land from the rich and build multistoreyed buildings on them
(b) To reclaim the land sold to the rich, to take away their bungalows and build for the poor
(c) To force the ‘haves’ to donate their land to the ‘have-nots’
(d) To reclaim marshy or submerged areas or other wasteland for settlements, cultivation or other use
Ans. (d)
Q.26. ‘Akharas’ were :
(a) Open spaces used for leisure activities
(b) A place for exchange of news about jobs, strikes, riots or demonstrations
(c) Open taps where housewives fought for water
(d) Traditional wrestling schools, located in every neighbourhood, where the young were trained to ensure both physical and moral fitness
Ans. (d)
Q.27. Which Indian city was the first to get a smoke nuisance legislation?
(a) Bombay in 1800 (b) Madras in 1863 (c) Calcutta in 1863 (d) Bombay in 1863
Ans. (c)
Q.28. Which of the following statements supports the view that Calcutta has a long history of air pollution?
(a) It is built on marshy land, the resulting fog combined with smoke from industries pollutes the air
(b) It has a huge population that depends on dung and wood as fuel in their daily life
(c) Industries and use of steam engines running on coal, cause air pollution
(d) All the above
Ans. (d)
Q.29. The rice mills of Tolleygunge tackled the problem of pollution by
(a) Reclaiming marshy lands and building factories on them to prevent smog
(b) Not allowing railways to bring coal to them
(c) Burning rice husks instead of coal in 1920
(d) Controlling smoke through legislation
Ans. (c)
Q.30. Who finally controlled industrial smoke in Calcutta?
(a) The Bengal government through legislation
(b) The inspectors of Bengal Smoke Nuisance Commission
(c) The factory owners themselves by using alternatives to coal
(d) All the above
Ans. (b)
Q.31. Which of the following statements proves that Bombay city was more crowded than
London in the late 19th century and early 20th century?
(a) Average space enjoyed by a Londoner in the 1840s was 155 square yards
(b) Bombay had only 95 square yards
(c) London grew according to a plan, Mumbay did not; thus it was more crowded
(d) By 1972, London had an average of 8 persons per house but the density in Bombay was as high as 20
Ans. (d)
Q.32. Andrew Mearus, a clergyman, in his book ‘The Bitter Cry of Outcast London’ (1880) showed :
(a) how children were pushed into low-paid work by their parents
(b) how crime was more profitable than working in small factories
(c) how children were deliberately made criminal by parents
(d) how crime was more profitable than labouring in small underpaid factories.
Ans. (d)
Q.33. The London poor exploded in a riot in 1886, because :
(a) They demanded relief from the terrible conditions of poverty
(b) The police had dispersed their peaceful march from Deptford to London
(c) The shopkeepers had not supported them
(d) A severe winter in 1886 had brought all outside work to a standstill and added to the misery and poverty of the London poor
Ans. (d)
Q.34. Inspite of all the problems, why are people attracted to cities?
(a) Cities offer a life full of variety and excitement
(b) Cities are attractive because they offer freedom and opportunity to migrants
(c) They offer new routes to social and economic mobility to millions who make them their home
(d) Both (b) and (c)
Ans. (d)
Q.35. The very first section of the underground railways in the world was opened on 10
January, 1863 between which two stations of London?
(a) Bombay to Thane (b) London to Paris
(c) Leeds to Manchester (d) Paddington to Farrington St.
Ans. (d)
Q.36. Which among the following was the first movie made by Dada Saheb Phalke?
(a) CID (b) Bombay (c) Raja Harishchandra (d) Devdas
Ans. (c)
Q.37. Who among following wrote a novel ‘Debganer Martye Agoman’ (The Gods Visit Earth)?
(a) Durgacharan Roy (b) Bankim Chandra (c) Rowlandson (d) Raymond Unwin
Ans. (a)
Q.38. What does Mayapuri mean to Bombay?
(a) A city of life (b) A city of dreams
(c) A city of happenings (d) A city of slums
Ans. (b)
Q.39. Which one of the following is not a Presidency city?
(a) Bombay (b) Calcutta (c) Kanpur (d) Madras
Ans. (c)
Q.40. Which one of the following sub-urban of Bombay was a mill village?
(a) Thane (b) Kalyan (c) Girangaon (d) None of these
Ans. (c)
Q.41. In the novel “Debganer Martye Agoman” (The Gods Visit Earth) the Gods were so impressed by Calcutta that they decided to build what of the following in heaven?
(a) A factory (b) A bridge (c) A monument (d) A museum
Ans. (d)
Q.42. What was Chartism a movement for?
(a) Equal pay for equal work (b) For adult male franchise
(c) Limited hours of work (d) For women franchise
Ans. (b)
Q.43. Which one of the following statements about chawls is not true?
(a) They were multi-storeyed structures (b) Working class people lived here
(c) They are owned by the government (d) They were in the native part of town
Ans. (c)
Q.44. Bombay passed into British hands as dowry in the marriage of Britain’s King Charles II to which one of the following?
(a) A French princess (b) A Portuguese princess
(c) A Mughal princess (d) A Dutch princess
Ans. (b)
Q.45. What was referred to as ‘iron monsters’?
(a) Industrial cities (b) New factories
(c) Tenements (d) London underground railway
Ans. (d)
Q.46. To which of the following European powers did the seven islands of Bombay belong before passing into the hands of the British?
(a) German (b) French (c) Dutch (d) Portuguese
Ans. (d)
Q.47. The first movie in India was shot in 1896 by :
(a) Dada Saheb Phalke (b) Harishchandra Bhatwadekar
(c) Raj Kapoor (d) Prithviraj Kapoor
Ans. (b)
Q.48. Town planning in Bombay came up as a result of fear of :
(a) Social revolution (b) Plague epidemic
(c) Fire (d) Overcrowding
Ans. (b)
Q.49. Which of the following factors did not encourage migration into Bombay on a large scale?
(a) Bombay dominated the maritime trade of India for a long time
(b) Bombay had enough job opportunity for all who came
(c) Railways encouraged higher scale of migration
(d) Famine in adjoining regions such as Kutch drove people into Bombay
Ans. (a)
Q.50. Which of the following industries in London did not employ large numbers of people in the 19th century?
(a) Clothing and footwear (b) Wood and furniture
(c) Railway manufactruing (d) Printing and stationery
Ans. (c)
Q.51. Where was the first underground railway built?
(a) New York (b) Moscow (c) London (d) Kolkatta
Ans. (c)
Q.52. Who wrote ‘The Bitter Cry of Outcast London’?
(a) Andrew Mearns (b) Charles Dickens (c) Ebenezer Howard (d) Durgacharan Ray
Ans. (a)
Q.53. Which city of India is called ‘Mayapuri’ or the city of dreams?
(a) Delhi (b) Chandigarh (c) Poona (d) Bombay
Ans. (d)
Q54. Who developed the principle of Garden City?
(a) Thomas Hardy (b) Charles Dickens
(c) Charles Booth (d) Ebenezer Howard
Ans. (d)
Q.55. Who was the producer of the film “Raja Harishchandra”?
(a) Dada Sahib Phalke (b) B. R. Chopra
(c) Dilip Kumar (d) Yash Chopra
Ans. (a)
Q.56. In which of the following year Bombay became the capital of the Bombay presidency?
(a) 1819 (b) 1850 (c) 1872 (d) 1880
Ans. (a)
Q.57. Which of the following books was written by Andrew Mearns, a clergyman?
(a) The Gods Visit Earth (b) The Bitter Cry of Outcast London
(c) Dombey and Son (d) Guest House
Ans. (b)
Q.58. Which one of the following statements is appropriate for ‘chawls’?
(a) Chawls were multistoreyed structures
(b) Chawls were single story structures
(c) Chawls were the well facilitated comfortable structures
(d) None of the above
Ans. (a)
Q.59. When was the very first section of the underground railway in world opened?
(a) 10 Jan 1860 (b) 10 Jan 1861 (c) 10 Jan 1862 (d) 10 Jan 1863
Ans. (d)
Q.60. Which one of the following was used in Tollygunge rice mills in place of coal ?
(a) Petrol (b) Wood (c) Rice husk (d) All of the above
Ans. (c)
Q.61. Which one of the following cities had a long history of air pollution?
(a) Mumbai (b) Calcutta (Kolkata) (c) Chennai (d) Delhi
Ans. (b)
Q.62. Which one of the following cities was designed as a garden city by Raymond Unwin and Barry Parker?
(a) London (b) Manchester (c) New Earswick (d) Lancashire
Ans. (c)
Q.63. A variety of steps were taken to clean up which one of the following cities?
(a) Chicago (b) Berlin (c) New York (d) London
Ans. (d)
Q.64. In which of the following years the Backbay Reconstruction Company got the right to reclaim western of share?
(a) 1858 (b) 1862 (c) 1864 (d) 1848
Ans. (c)
Q.65. When was the Bombay Improvement Trust established?
(a) 1861 (b) 1898 (c) 1899 (d) 1862
Ans. (b)
Q.66. Bombay was first under whose control?
(a) Portuguese (b) English (c) French (d) Dutch
Ans. (a)
Q.67. When did the earliest reclamation project in Bomaby begin?
(a) 1780 (b) 1784 (c) 1783 (d) None
Ans. (b)
Q.68. Who designed the Garden City of New Earswick?
(a) Barry Parker (b) Ebenezer Howard
(c) Raymond Unwin and Barry Parker (d) Napoleon
Ans. (c)
Q.69. Which movie did Dada Saheb Phalke make?
(a) CID (b) Guest House
(c) Raja Harishchandra (d) Tezab
Ans. (c)
Q.70. Name one factor which changed the form of urbanisation in the modern world.
(a) Capitalism (b) Socialism
(c) Industrialisation (d) Unemployment
Ans. (c)
Q.71. Which of the following writers, wrote several volumes on the London labour in the mid
of the 19th century?
(a) Leo Tolstoy (b) Henry Mayhew (c) Thomas Hardy (d) None of these
Ans. (b)
Q.72. Rent control was introduced in Britain during the
(a) First World War (b) Second World War (c) 1950s (d) never
Ans. (a)
Q.73. Which of the following groups demanded the Right to Vote for adult males in Britain
during the 18th century?
Ans. (a) The Christian Movement(c) The Dock Workers(d) (b) Temperance Movement(d) Chartism Movement
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