The Age Of Industrialisation Questions | Class 10 | Social Science | Unit 1 | Chapter 4 2024

Last updated on July 14th, 2024 at 05:04 pm

The Age Of Industrialisation Questions

Below are some of the very important NCERT Class 10 Social Science Section 2 Unit 1 Chapter 4 The Age Of Industrialisation Questions. These Class 10 The Age Of Industrialisation Questions have been prepared by expert teachers and subject experts based on the latest syllabus and pattern of term 2. Questions with Answers to help students understand the concept.

These Questions for Class 10 Social Science The Age Of Industrialisation Questions with answers are very important for the latest CBSE term 2 pattern. These class 10 notes,ย  Q and A are very important for students who want to score high in CBSE Board.

We have put together these NCERT Questions of Class 10 Social Science chapter 4 The Age Of Industrialisation Questions for practice on a regular basis to score high in exams. Refer to these Questions with Answers here along with a detailed explanation.

Short Answer (SA) Type Questions

1.ย  Explain the meaning of the term โ€˜Industrial Revolution .

2. How did factory production began in England?

3. Highlight any three benefits of industrialisation on the society

4. Describe the conditions of workers in Europe after the industrial revolution. (CBSE 2019)

5. Explain how Indian merchants and bankers were involved in the export trade in the early 18th century.ย ย 

6. Mention any three restrictions imposed by the British government upon the Indian merchants in the 19th century.

7. Critically examine how the British companies gradually asserted monopoly rights in India.

8. Examine the causes of clashes between weavers and gomasthas in many weaving villages.

9. Describe any three major problems faced by Indian cotton weavers in the nineteenth century.

10. How did many Indian entrepreneurs survive despite the tight economic control imposed by the British government?

11. Explain the role of European Managing Agencies in India.

12. Describe the role of โ€˜Jobbersโ€™ in the beginning of the twentieth century in India.

13. Why did industrial production in India increase during the first world war?
Or
Explain the impact of the first world war on industrial production in India.

14. Give reasons why British industries failed to recapture their old hold on the Indian market after the First World War.

15. โ€˜Despite stiff competition from machine- made thread, the Indian handloom production not onlyย survived, but also saw a steady growth in theย 20th centuryโ€™. Explain reasons in favor of your answer.ย 
Or
How did Handloom cloth production expand steadily in the 20th century? Explain
.

Short Answer Type Question Answers

Ans. 1

The term โ€˜Industrial Revolutionโ€˜ stands for those developments and inventions which revolutionized the technique and organization of production in the later half of the 18th century.ย 

This Industrial Revolution replaced the previous domestic system of production by the new factory system. In place of manual and animal power, new machines and steam power were used for producing things.ย 

This revolution replaced cottage industries by factories, hand labor by machine work and craftsmen and artists by capitalists and factory owners.

Ans. 2

Factory production began in England with the establishment of early factories by the 1730s. The number of factories increased dramatically in the late 18th century During this period, cotton was the first good whose production flourished. It was followed by the rapid establishment and expansion of the iron and steel industry.

The driving force of industrialisation was the inventions and technological changes of the 18th century. This innovation increased the efficiency at each stage of production and enhanced the output produced per worker, especially in the case of cotton and other textile industries.

Richard Arkwright laid the foundation of the factory system by creating the cotton mill. The spinning Jenny and other devices were invented to speed up textile production.ย 

This allowed more careful supervision over the production process, proper check over quality and regulation of the labor force employed. Thus, in the late 19th century, factories increasingly became an intimate part of Britain.

Ans. 3

The benefits of industrialisation on the society can be are

  • Industrialisation leads to improved standards of the entire society as a whole and improves the condition.ย 
  • It leads to prosperity in the form of the availability of better and more food and clothing and gives longer life expectancies, freedom from hard physical work, more and better facility for development of intellectual capability of individuals.ย 
  • It produces employment wealth and Technical skill, it provides modern convenience medical advances, changes in Lifestyle education, transportation development etc.ย 

Ans. 4

The conditions ofย  workers in Europe after the industrial revolution were

  • In most of the industries, the demand for labor was seasonal. The actual possibility of getting a job depended on existing networks of friendship and relations.
  • The workers were getting very low wages.
  • Factories employed a large number of women. With technological development women gradually lost their industrial jobs.
  • Most of the workers were living in slums. Factory or workshop owners did not provide housing facilities to the migrant workers.

Ans. 5

Indian merchants and bankers were involved in the export trade in early 18th century in the following ways:ย 

  • They were financing production, carrying goods and supplying exporters.
  • The supply merchants linked the port towns to the inland regions.
  • They gave advances to the weavers. produced the woven cloths from weaving villages and carried the supply to the ports.
  • At the port the big shippers and export merchants had brokers who negotiated the price and bought goods from the supply merchants operating Island.

Ans. 6

The restriction imposed by the British government upon the Indian merchants in the 19th Century were:

  • The British government developed a system of management and controlled that would eliminate competition and restrict the space within which.
  • Indian merchants could function Indian merchants are not allowed to trade with Europe in manufactured goodย 
  • Indian merchants had to export mostly raw materials like raw cotton, opium, wheat and Indigo required by the British. They were also gradually thrown out of the shipping business

Ans. 7

British companies gradually asserted monopoly rights in India in the following ways

  • The company appointed paid gomasthas to supervise weavers, collect supplies and examine the quality of clothย ย ย 
  • The company introduced the system of advances to the weavers to prevent company weavers from dealing with other buyers.
  • The company introduced a system of management and control that would eliminate competition, control costs and ensure regular supplies of cotton and silk goods.

Ans. 8

The causes of clashes between the weavers and the gomasthas were:

  • The gomasthas gave loans to the weavers to purchase the raw material for their production. Those who took loans had to hand over the product timely to the gomasthas.
  • They had no option to sell their products to other traders.ย 
  • Often the price given by the gomasthas (dictated by the company) was miserably low and the loans the weavers had accepted tied them to the company. Weavers along with village traders revolted and opposed the company official and sometimes migrated to other villages.
  • The gomasthas had no feelings for the weavers. They marched into villages with sepoys and peons and punished the weavers.

Thus, clashes between the weavers and gomasthas became very common.

Ans. 9

The major problems that the Indian weavers faced in the nineteenth century were:

(i) Their export market collapsed and the local market shrank

(ii) Local market was flooded with Manchester goods (goods imported from Britain). These imported cotton goods were so cheap that Indian Weavers could not easily compete with them

(iii) Due to Civil war in USA Weavers in India did not get sufficient supply of raw cotton and they were formed to buy raw cotton and high prices in this situation weaving were not profitable

Ans. 10

Many Indian entrepreneurs survive despite of tight economical control imposed by British government by adopting the following ways:ย 

  • Some merchants traded with Burma, Middle East and East Africa accumulated capital through other rate networks.
  • Some merchants operated within India. Carrying goods from one place to another, banking money, transferring funds between cities and financing traders.ย 
  • When opportunities of investment in industries opened up many Indian entrepreneurs set up their home factories.

Ans. 11

Role of European Managing Agencies in India was:

  • European Managing Agencies (e.g. Bird Heiglers and Co., Andrew Yule, Jardine Skinner and Co.) dominated industrial production in India. They were interested in certain kinds of products which could be exported.
  • By acquiring land at cheap rates from the colonial government, they established tea and coffee plantations.ย ย ย 
  • They invested money in mining, indigo and jute. These products were not for sale in India. Most of these products were used for export trade.
  • Till the First World War, these agencies controlled a large sector of Indian industries.
  • These agencies mobilized capital, set up joint stock companies and managed them.

Ans. 12

Jobs where people employed by Industrialist to recruit the right people from among the job seekers very often the Java was an old and trusted were they played an important role in the males of India in the beginning of the twelfth century in the following ways:

  • He got people from his village and insured them jobsย 
  • He helped people to settle them in the Cityย 
  • He provided money in time of crisisย 
  • Jobbers became persons with some authority and power. He began demanding money and gifts for his favor and started to control the lives of workers

Ans. 13

Industrial production in India was impacted or increased during the first world war due to the following reasons:

  • British Industrialists were busy with wall production to meet the needs of the army and they stopped British goods in other countries like India. It was a good opportunity for Indian industries to fill in empty markets with their own products. Suddenly, Indian industries had a vast home market to supply
  • As the war continued Indian factories were called upon to supply war needs like jute bags, cloth for Army uniform tents and Leather boots etc.
  • The increased demand for a variety of products led to the setting up of new factories. Production was also increased by the old Industries. Many new workers were employed and forced to work more hours.

Ans. 14

British industries failed to recapture their old hold on the Indian market after the First World War because

  • During the war years, Indian industries gradually consolidated their position by substituting foreign manufacturers and capturing the home market.
  • The nationalist movement had gained ground under Mahatma Gandhi and his call for use of Swadeshi products was largely supported.
  • Countries like Japan, US and Germany had modernized and Britain could not compete with them.

Thus, the British economy fell down after the world war and cotton production and exports of cotton cloth fell dramatically.

Ans. 15

Despite stiff competition from machine made Threads the Indian weavers survived and expanded steadily in the 20th century due to following reasons:

  • Indian weavers begin to use fly shuttle which increased productivity per workers, speeded up production and reduced labor demand
  • Among the weavers some produced cloth while other woves finer varieties. The finer varieties were brought up by the rich and the sale of Banarasi and Baluchari Sarees were not affected by famines or droughts

Long Answer (LA) Type Questions

1. What was proto industrialisation? In what ways does proto-industrial production help the poor farmers in the countryside?

2. Describe the role of โ€˜technologyโ€™ in the transformation of the world in the nineteenth century.

3. Describe the life of workers during the 19th century in England.

4. Why did the export of Indian textile decline at the beginning of the nineteenth century? Explain any three reasons.ย 

5. Describe the role of early entrepreneurs of India in the development of industries.

6. By the first decade of the 20th century, a series of changes affected the pattern of industrialisation in India. Explain.ย 

7. โ€˜We find that from the very beginning of the industrial age, advertisements played a vital role in expanding the markets for products.โ€™ Explain the statement in the context of the pre-independence period of our country.

Long Answer Type Question Answers

Ans. 1

The proto-industrial system was a part of a network of commercial exchanges. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries with the expansion of world trade and acquisition of colonies, the demand for goods expanded. But the merchants could not set up business in towns due to the strict restriction imposed by guilds.

So the merchants turned to the countryside. Proto-industrialisation helped the poor farmers in the countryside in the following ways:

  • The peasants and cottagers looked for alternative ways for their survival.
  • Many had small land holdings, which couldnโ€™t provide work for all the members.
  • When merchants came around and offered money to produce goods for them, peasants eagerly accepted.ย ย ย 
  • By working for the merchants, they could remain in the countryside and also could cultivate their own small plots of land.

In this way, proto-industrial production supplemented the shrinking income of the poor peasants and raised their standard of living.

Ans. 2

The role of technology in transformation of the world in the nineteenth century was

  • Technological advancement through the invention of railways, steamships, telegraph etc transformed the nineteenth century world. Faster railways, lighter wagons and larger ships helped move food more cheaply and quickly from far away farms to final markets.ย ย ย 
  • Development of new technology like refrigerated ships enabled the transport of perishable foods like meat, egg more quickly than before. As a result, poor European countries got better food, This brought social peace and also support for imperialism.
  • Industrialisation forced people to migrate from rural areas to urban areas in search of jobs in the factories. It encouraged the spirit ofย  individualism among both men and women. Collective values of rural life begin to fade out in urban areas.
  • It further widened the gap between rich and poor. The factory workers were forced to live in healthy slum areas of cities instead of a pollution free rural landscape.ย 
  • Industrialisation forces the entire household i.e. women and children to work. Child labour become a major problem of the society

Ans. 3

The life of workers during the 19th century in England wasย 

Low wages. The workers were getting very low wages in the third 19th century. About 10% of the population was extremely poor. The abundance of labor in the market affected the lives of the workers.

Women workers. Factories employed large number of women. With technological development women gradually lost their industrial jobs.

Overcrowded cities. Most of the workers were living in slums. As the new possible job opportunities were in the cities, a number of people from the countryside traveled towards the cities in search of work.

Seasonal work. In most of the industries the demand for labor was seasonal. The actual possibility of getting a job depends on existing networks of friendship and kin relations. Many of the workers had to wait for weeks, spending nights under bridges or night shelters.

Ans. 4

By the end of the 19th century, export of Indian textile industry started to decline due to the following reasons:

East India Company Gained Power. Once the East India Company established political power, it asserted a monopoly right to trade. It proceeded to develop a system of management and control that would eliminate competition, control costs and ensure regular supplies of cotton and silk goods.

Growth of Cotton Industries in England. As cotton industries developed in England, industrial groups became worried about the imports from other countries. They pressured the government to impose import duties on cotton textile, so that Manchester goods could easily sell in Britain without facing any competition from outside.ย 

Further the industrialists persuaded the East India Company to sell British products forcefully in the Indian market.

The result of two edge policies. To sell British products in India East India Company followed a two edged policy I.e. no taxes on imports but high taxes on Exports. Due to this policy, local Indian markets were flooded with cheap Manchester machine made products.

Shortage of raw material. Due to the American Civil War, cotton supplies from the US were cut off and Britain turned to India for cotton supplies.ย  As raw cotton exports from India increased. Indian Weavers face the problem due to the shortage of raw material for the textile industry.

Ans. 5

The role of early entrepreneurs of India in the development of industries wasย 

  • From the late 18th century, the British in India began exporting opium to China and took tea from China to England many Indian Businessmen were involved in this trade.
  • In the 19th century many cotton mills, Jute mills, spinning and weaving mills were set up and most of this was set up by Indian entrepreneurs.
  • In Bengal Dwarkanath Tagore, in Bombay Diksha petit and Jamshedji Tata build huge industrial Empire by accumulating their initial wealth partly from export of China and partly from raw cotton export to England. Other businessmen like Seth Hukumchand, JN Tata setup Jute mill iron and steel factories in India.
  • Some merchants from Madras traded with Burma and some others traded with the Middle East and East Africa.
  • Some entrepreneurs operated within India, carry goods from one place to another, banking money, transferring funds between cities and financing other traders. When opportunities of investment were opened up, many factories were set up.

Ans. 6

By the first decade of the 20th century, a series of changes affected the pattern of industrialisation in India in the following ways:

Effect of Swadeshi and Boycott Movement. After the partition of Bengal, the Swadeshi Movement was developed. It has two sides i.e. positive and negative. In the positive side, nationalists urged people to use only swadeshi goods and ill the negative side to boycott foreign goods.

This movement had an immense effect on the economy. There was an increase in the demand for Indian goods, especially clothes.

Aim of industrial groups. Industrial groups organized themselves to protect their collective interests. They pressured the government to increase tariff protection and grant other concessions.

Decline of export to China. From 1906 the export of Indian yarn to China declined as produce from Chinese and Japanese mills flooded the Chinese Market. Thus Industrial Estate in India began shifting from yarn to cloth production. Cotton goods production in India doubled between 1900 and 1912.

Result of the first world war. Till the first world war, industrial growth was slow, British mills became busy with war productions. Thus, Manchester imports to India declined. Suddenly, Indian mills got a vast home market to supply. As the war prolonged, Indian factories had to supply different war needs.ย 

This led to the setting up of new factories and multiple shifts for the old factory. Indian industry developed immensely at that period. After the war Manchester could not recapture its old position in the Indian market.

Ans. 7

From the very beginning of the industrial age, advertisements played a vital role in expanding the markets for products in the following ways:

  • The Manchester industrialists began selling their cloth in India by putting labels on the cloth bundles. When buyers saw such labels on the cloth like โ€˜Made In Manchesterโ€™, they felt confident about buying the cloth.ย 
  • The manufacturers also used images of Indian Gods, Goddesses and important personalities on these labels. These images helped to make the foreign products somehow familiar to Indian people.
  • In the late 19th century, the British manufacturers used calendars to popularize their products. Unlike newspapers and magazines, calendars were being used even by illiterate people.
  • Indian manufacturers even advertised the nationalist message which was clear and specific. For example, โ€˜if you care for the nation then buy products that Indians produceโ€™. Advertisement became a medium of the message of Swadeshi.

Case-Study Based Questions

1. Read the given cases/sources and answer the following questions.

Source A hand Labor and steam power

In Victorian Britain, the upper classes- the aristocrats and the Bourgeoisie preferred things produced by hand. Handmade products came to symbolize refinement and class. They were better finished, individually produced and carefully designed. Machine made goods were for export to the colonies.ย 

(i) Evaluate the difference of handmade products by the Aristocrat and Bourgeoisieย  in England.

Source B Life of workersย 

The abundance of labor in the market affected the lives of workers. As news of possible jobs travel to the countryside hundreds tramped to the cities. The actual possibility of getting a job depends on the existing network of friendship and kin relations. If you had a relative or a friend in a factory you are more likely to get a job quickly. But not everyone has social connections. Many job seekers had to wait weeks spending night under bridges or in night shelters.

(ii) โ€˜The abundance of labor in the market affects the lives of the workersโ€™. Explain in the context of 19th century Britain?

Source C Manchester comes to India

Cotton weavers in India thus faced two problems at the same time: their export market collapsed and the local market shrank, being glutted with Manchester imports. Produced by machines at lower costs, the imported cotton goods were so cheap that weavers could not easily compete with them. By the 1850s, reports from most weaving regions of India narrated stories of decline and desolation.

(iii) What kind of problems were faced by Indian cotton weavers? Describe.

2. Read the given source and answer the following question.

In the countryside poor peasants and artisans begin working for merchants. This was a time when open fields were disappearing and commons were being enclosed. Cottages and poor presents who had earlier dependent on common lands for their survival, gathering their firewoods, berries, vegetables, hay and straw, had to now look for alternative sources of income.ย 

Many had tiny plots of land which could not provide work for all members of the household. So, when merchants came around and offered advances to produce good for them,ย  peasant households eagerly agreed, by working for the merchant, they could remain in the countryside and continue to cultivate their small plots.ย 

Income from proto industrial production supplemented their shrinking income from cultivation. It also allowed them a fuller use of their family labor resources.

This proto-industrial system was thus part of a network of commercial exchanges. It was controlled by merchants and the goods were produced by a vast number of producers working within their family farms, not in factories. At each stage of production 20 to 25 workers were employed by each merchant. This meant that each clothier was controlling hundreds of workers.

(i) What is a proto-industrial system? Discuss its importance.

(ii) Which phase of industrialisation is called Proto-industrialisation and why?

(iii) Explain the main features of proto-industrialisation.ย 

Case-Study Based Answers

Ans. 1

(i)

The upper class- Aristocrats and the Bourgeoisie preferred things produced by hand because it symbolized refinement and class they were better finished designed and individually produced.

(ii)

The abundance of labor in the market affected the lives of the workers during the 19th century as news of possible jobs traveled to the countryside, poor peasants and vagrants moved to the cities in large numbers.ย 

But the actual possibility of getting a job depended on existing networks of friendship and kin relations. But not everyone had social connections.ย 

Many job seekers had to wait for weeks, spending sleepless nights under bridges or in night shelters.

(iii).ย 

The problems faced by the Indian weavers wereย 

  • Their export market collapsedย 
  • The local markets shrank due to the low cost machine made British products.

Ans. 2

(i) The proto-industrial system was a network of early forms of commercial exchange before industrialisation. It was controlled by the merchants.

It was important as the peasants could cultivate their own small patches of land and yet could earn some supplementary income by producing for the merchants. This allowed them to make better use of the available family resources.

(ii) The early phase of industrialisation in which large scale production was carried out for international market not at factories, but in decentralized units is called Proto-industrialization. It is called proto industrialisation because products are made by hand only.

(iii)ย  The main features of proto industrialisation were

  • It was controlled by merchants or guilds who had monopoly rights to produce and trade goods.
  • Generally family members were involved to the production process and the production was carried out in countryside.

Final Words

From the above article, you have practiced Class 10 Social Science chapter 4 The Age Of Industrialisation Questions. We hope that the above-mentioned notes, Q & A for term 2 will surely help you in your exam.ย 

If you have any doubts or queries regarding Class 12 Economics Section 2 chapter 4 The Age Of Industrialisation Questions feel free to reach us and we will get back to you as early as possible.

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