Answer: Malwa and Gujarat
Answer: Malwa and Gujarat
Assertion (A) : Barani writes, ‘Sultan Muhammad Tughlaq talked as if he hated low-born people more than he hated idols, Nevertheless, I have seen him promoting Najba, the low-born son of a musician, to such an extent that he rose higher in status than many maliks, for Gujarat, Multan and Badaon were put in his charge . . . It was strange how he gave high offices and governments of extensive territories and great provinces to men of low and mean birth’.
Reason (R) : The Sultan believed in offices being open to talent. He dispensed with whatever considerations of birth had persisted in the administration and appointed low-born persons to the highest offices in the administration.
In the context of the above two statements which of the following is correct ?
Code :Answer: Both (A) and (R) are true and (R) is the correct explanation of (A)
Identify the Sultan.
Answer: Iltutmish
Select the correct answer from the code given below :
(a) Balban
(b) Firuz Tughlaq
(c) Bahlol Lodi
(d) Sikandar Lodi
Code :Answer: (b) and (d)
Assertion (A) : Balban appointed ‘Khwaja’ to important iqtas to be selected from ‘mutasarrafs’. He was a civil official and dealt with accounts and records.
Reason (R) : The appointment of such an officer by the Sultan on the recommendation of the Wazir suggests the desire on the part of the Sultan to keep an eye on the revenue division and put a check on the activities of the muqtas.
In the context of the above two statements, which of the following is correct ?
Answer: Both (A) and (R) are true and (R) is the correct explanation of (A)
Answer: At the same time, he discriminated the Shaikhzadas (Indian Muslims)
(a) The most revered collection of Kabir’s verses by the Kabir Panthis is the collection Bijak, contained in the Adi Granth.
(b) Kabir’s verses in the Panchvani literature composed by the Dadu-Panthis appear to be a little less authentic than the Punjab tradition.
(c) Charlotte Vaudeville argues that the corpus of Kabir in the Adi Granth is ‘free from the Kabir Panthi sectarian element’.
(d) David Lorenzen believes that all the three major collections of Kabir contain interpolations of material from other sources.
Select the correct answer from the code given below :
Answer: (a), (b), (c), (d)
Assertion (A) : In the medieval period the dam was as much an index of the value of copper, as the rupee was of silver. Interestingly the regional price variations attained a much greater importance in the case of copper metal than in that of gold or silver.
Reason (R) : The main supplies were from the mines of the northern and eastern slopes of the Aravalli and the Vindhyan ranges. The proximity to these could play a large part in determining the extent of differences in price among various markets.
In the context of the above two statements which of the following is correct ?
Answer: (A) is true, but (R) is false
Answer: Mirza Raja Jai Singh
Identify this royal great grandfather - great grandson pair.
Answer: Babur - Jahangir
Answer: Akbar
Answer: Akbar
(a) In the Mughal paintings of Akbarnama usually two painters collaborated a single painting.
(b) The sketch and the colouring were usually done by a single painter.
(c) The collaborator used to finish portraits only.
(d) In certain paintings sketching, colouring and portraits are done by three different painters.
Answer: (a), (b), (c), (d)
(a) Abdus Samad
(b) Abul Hasan
(c)Ustad Mansur
(d) Mir Sayyid Ali
Select the correct answer from the code given below :
Code :Answer: (b) and (c).
(a) Within his own kingdom (Swarajya) Shivaji attempted to build regular administration on the model of Deccan Sultanates. The taxation within it was very light.
(b) Shivaji’s death saw a momentary eclipse of the polity he had founded, as his son Shambhaji was captured and executed by Aurangzeb.
(c) Maratha sardars enlarged their resources by a rigorous collection of Chauth, failing which they subjected the recalcitrant territory to plunder.
(d) Tarabai, the widow of Shivaji’s son, accepted the Mughal suzerainty.
Code :Answer: (b) and (c) only