Theme 1: Modern History → British Policies · GS1-U01-T01-S01
2024
15m
250w
How far was the Industrial Revolution in England responsible for the decline of handicrafts and cottage industries in India?
Mapping rationale: Direct link between British industrial capitalism and deindustrialisation of Indian artisan economy — core British policy impact.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T01-S05
2022
15m
250w
Why was there a sudden spurt in famines in colonial India since the mid-eighteenth century? Give reasons.
Mapping rationale: Colonial revenue extraction and land settlement policies as structural causes of famine — British administrative consequence.
2022
15m
250w
Why did the armies of the British East India Company — mostly comprising of Indian soldiers — win consistently against the more numerous and better equipped armies of the then Indian rulers? Give reasons.
Mapping rationale: British military superiority as a policy and organizational advantage enabling conquest — EIC strategic dominance.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T01-S02
2018
15m
250w
Why was indentured labour taken by the British from India to other colonies? Have they been able to preserve their cultural identity over there?
Mapping rationale: British labour policy of indenture as colonial exploitation and its cultural aftermath in diaspora populations.
2015
15m
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It would have been difficult for the Constituent Assembly to complete its historic task of drafting the Constitution for Independent India in just three years but for the experience gained with the Government of India Act, 1935. Discuss.
Mapping rationale: Government of India Act 1935 as a British constitutional policy that provided the institutional scaffolding for independent India’s Constitution.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T04-S03
2014
15m
250w
Examine critically the various facets of economic policies of the British in India from mid-eighteenth century till independence.
Mapping rationale: Broad survey question on British economic policy — drain of wealth, deindustrialisation, land revenue systems, and trade policy.
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Theme 1: Modern History → Eve of British Conquest · GS1-U01-T01-S03
2022
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The political and administrative reorganization of states and territories has been a continuous ongoing process since the mid-nineteenth century. Discuss with examples.
Mapping rationale: Doctrine of Lapse and territorial annexation as British administrative reorganization — connects mid-19th century reorganization to post-independence state reorganization.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T04-S01
2017
10m
150w
Clarify how mid-eighteenth century India was beset with the spectre of a fragmented polity?
Mapping rationale: Mughal decline, rise of regional powers, and the political vacuum that facilitated British expansion — structural conditions preceding conquest.
2014
10m
150w
The third battle of Panipat was fought in 1761. Why were so many empire-shaking battles fought at Panipat?
Mapping rationale: Panipat’s strategic geography as gateway to the Indo-Gangetic plain — geopolitical significance of the site for imperial control.
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Theme 1: Modern History → Peasant and Tribal Rebellions · GS1-U01-T01-S05
2023
15m
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How did the colonial rule affect the tribals in India and what was the tribal response to the colonial oppression?
Mapping rationale: Impact of forest laws and land alienation on tribal communities; major tribal uprisings as colonial-era resistance movements.
2019
15m
250w
The 1857 Uprising was the culmination of the recurrent big and small local rebellions that had occurred in the preceding hundred years of British rule. Elucidate.
Mapping rationale: 1857 as the apex of a continuum of peasant, tribal, and sepoy rebellions against colonial economic and cultural oppression.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T01-S02
2017
15m
250w
Examine how the decline of the traditional artisanal industry in colonial India crippled the rural economy.
Mapping rationale: Deindustrialisation creating rural distress as a root cause of peasant unrest and agrarian rebellions under colonialism.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T01-S01
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Theme 1: Modern History → Personalities · GS1-U01-T01-S06
2025
10m
150w
Examine the main aspects of Akbar’s religious syncretism.
Mapping rationale: Akbar’s Din-i-Ilahi, Sulh-i-kul policy and engagement with diverse religious traditions as a case study in Mughal-era religious accommodation — connects to socio-religious history of medieval/early modern India.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T01-S07
2025
15m
250w
Mahatma Jotirao Phule’s writings and efforts of social reforms touched issues of almost all subaltern classes. Discuss.
Mapping rationale: Phule as a 19th century social reformer whose anti-caste, anti-Brahmin, and agrarian writings addressed the intersecting oppressions of caste, gender, and class — central to socio-religious reform sub-theme.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T01-S07
2023
15m
250w
What was the difference between Mahatma Gandhi and Rabindranath Tagore in their approach towards education and nationalism?
Mapping rationale: Competing visions of Indian identity — Gandhi’s village-centred nationalism vs. Tagore’s universalist humanism, both shaping the freedom movement’s intellectual culture.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T02-S06
2018
15m
250w
Throw light on the significance of thoughts of Mahatma Gandhi in the present times.
Mapping rationale: Gandhi’s philosophy of non-violence, trusteeship, and village swaraj assessed for contemporary relevance — personality and ideology.
2016
15m
250w
Highlight the difference in the approach of Subhash Chandra Bose and Mahatma Gandhi in the struggle for freedom.
Mapping rationale: Ideological divergence within the freedom movement — Gandhi’s non-violence vs. Bose’s militant nationalism and INA strategy.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T02-S03
2015
15m
250w
How different would have been the achievement of Indian independence without Mahatma Gandhi? Discuss.
Mapping rationale: Counter-factual analysis of Gandhi’s indispensable role in mass mobilisation and giving the freedom movement a moral-ethical framework.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T02-S03
2015
15m
250w
Mahatma Gandhi and Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, despite having divergent approaches and strategies, had a common goal of amelioration of the downtrodden. Elucidate.
Mapping rationale: Contrasting personalities with shared anti-oppression goals — Gandhi-Ambedkar relationship as a defining tension of the independence era.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T01-S07
2013
15m
250w
Several foreigners made India their homeland and participated in various movements. Analyze their role in the Indian struggle for freedom.
Mapping rationale: Role of Annie Besant, A.O. Hume, C.F. Andrews etc. — foreign contributors to Indian nationalism as a sub-theme of personalities.
2013
15m
250w
“In many ways, Lord Dalhousie was the founder of modern India.” Elaborate.
Mapping rationale: Dalhousie’s railways, telegraph, postal reforms, and annexation policies as constitutive of the modern Indian administrative state.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T01-S01
2013
15m
250w
Discuss the contribution of Maulana Abul Kalam Azad to pre- and post-independent India.
Mapping rationale: Azad as nationalist Muslim leader, education minister, and synthesiser of composite culture — personality spanning freedom struggle and post-independence consolidation.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T04-S03
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Theme 2: Freedom Struggle → Gandhian Phase · GS1-U01-T02-S03
2024
15m
250w
What were the events that led to the Quit India Movement? Point out its results.
Mapping rationale: Cripps Mission failure, Wardha Resolution, and the August Kranti as the arc of the Quit India Movement — key episode of the Gandhian phase.
2020
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Since the decade of the 1920s, the national movement acquired various ideological strands and thereby expanded its social base. Discuss.
Mapping rationale: Entry of peasants, workers, women, and minorities into nationalist politics under Gandhi’s mass-mobilisation strategy in the 1920s onward.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T02-S07
2019
15m
250w
Many voices had strengthened and enriched the nationalist movement during the Gandhian phase. Elaborate.
Mapping rationale: Contributions of Nehru, Patel, Bose, Ambedkar, and others alongside Gandhi — diversity of leadership enriching the independence movement.
2017
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Highlight the importance of new objectives that got added to the vision of Indian independence since the twenties of the last century.
Mapping rationale: From ‘self-government’ to Purna Swaraj, economic justice, and social equality — the expanding ideological vision of the Gandhian era nationalism.
2016
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Discuss the role of women in the freedom struggle especially during the Gandhian phase.
Mapping rationale: Women’s participation in NCM, Salt March, CDM as a defining feature of Gandhian mass politics — intersection of gender and nationalism.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T02-S07
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Theme 2: Freedom Struggle → Moderate Phase / Personalities · GS1-U01-T02-S05 / S06
2021
15m
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To what extent did the role of moderates prepare a base for the wider freedom movement? Comment.
Mapping rationale: Moderates’ constitutional methods, economic critique, and institution-building as precondition for the mass nationalist movement.
2021
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Bring out the constructive programmes of Mahatma Gandhi during Non-Cooperation Movement and Civil Disobedience Movement.
Mapping rationale: Khadi, village industries, Hindu-Muslim unity, and national education as Gandhi’s constructive agenda alongside civil resistance.
2020
15m
250w
Evaluate the policies of Lord Curzon and their long-term implications on the national movement.
Mapping rationale: Curzon’s Partition of Bengal as the catalyst for Swadeshi movement and radicalisation of the Congress — British policy producing nationalist response.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T01-S01
2017
10m
150w
Why did the ‘Moderates’ fail to carry conviction with the nation about their proclaimed ideology and political goals by the end of the nineteenth century?
Mapping rationale: Limitations of petitionary politics, English-educated elite disconnect from masses, and rise of extremism as response to moderate failure.
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Theme 4: Post-Independence Consolidation · GS1-U01-T04
2025
15m
250w
Trace India’s consolidation process during early phase of independence in terms of polity, economy, education and international relations.
Mapping rationale: Integration of princely states, planned economy, Nehruvian foreign policy, and national education as the four pillars of post-independence consolidation.
2021
15m
250w
Assess the main administrative issues and socio-cultural problems in the integration process of Indian Princely States.
Mapping rationale: Sardar Patel’s integration strategy, accession disputes (Hyderabad, Junagadh, Kashmir), and the administrative challenge of merging over 500 states.
Secondary: GS1-U01-T04-S01
2013
10m
150w
Critically discuss the objectives of Bhoodan and Gramdan Movements initiated by Acharya Vinoba Bhave and their success.
Mapping rationale: Post-independence Gandhian land reform movement as a non-statutory alternative to land redistribution — agrarian social movement of the Nehru era.
2013
10m
150w
Write a critical note on the evolution and significance of the slogan “Jai Jawan Jai Kisan”.
Mapping rationale: Lal Bahadur Shastri’s wartime nationalism linking agrarian self-reliance with military defence — post-independence political symbolism.
2013
10m
150w
Analyze the circumstances that led to Tashkent Agreement in 1966. Discuss the highlights of the agreement.
Mapping rationale: 1965 Indo-Pak War, Soviet mediation, and Shastri’s death at Tashkent — key episode in early post-independence diplomatic history.
2013
10m
150w
Critically examine the compulsions which prompted India to play a decisive role in the emergence of Bangladesh.
Mapping rationale: Humanitarian crisis, strategic interests, and Indira Gandhi’s foreign policy as factors in India’s decisive 1971 intervention enabling Bangladesh’s creation.
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Theme 5: World History · GS1-U01-T05
2024
15m
250w
How far is it correct to say that the First World War was fought essentially for the preservation of balance of power?
Mapping rationale: Alliance systems, imperial rivalries, and power-balance considerations as causes of WWI — World Wars / Interwar sub-theme.
2023
15m
250w
Bring out the socio-economic effects of the introduction of railways in different countries of the world.
Mapping rationale: Railways as driver of industrial capitalism, urbanisation, and colonialism globally — Industrial Revolution sub-theme with comparative dimension.
2021
15m
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“There arose a serious challenge to the democratic state system between the two world wars.” Evaluate the statement.
Mapping rationale: Rise of fascism, Nazism, and authoritarian regimes in the interwar period as a systemic challenge to liberal democracy.
2019
15m
250w
Explain how the foundations of the modern world were laid by the American and French Revolutions.
Mapping rationale: Enlightenment ideals, constitutionalism, popular sovereignty, and human rights as legacies of the Atlantic revolutions — American & French Revolution sub-theme.
2017
15m
250w
What problems were germane to the decolonization process of Malay Peninsula?
Mapping rationale: Emergency, communist insurgency, ethnic complexity, and British management of decolonisation in Malaya — Decolonization sub-theme.
2016
15m
250w
The anti-colonial struggles in West Africa were led by the new elite of Western-educated Africans. Examine.
Mapping rationale: Role of Western-educated intelligentsia in African nationalism — Decolonization sub-theme examining elite-led movements in Ghana, Nigeria etc.
2015
15m
250w
Why did the industrial revolution first occur in England? Discuss the quality of life of the people there during the industrialization. How does it compare with that in India at present?
Mapping rationale: Pre-conditions of British industrialisation (capital, resources, enclosures, Protestantism) and its social costs — Industrial Revolution sub-theme with India comparison.
2015
15m
250w
To what extent can Germany be held responsible for causing the two World Wars? Discuss critically.
Mapping rationale: Fischer controversy, Nazi aggression, and debates on German war guilt — World Wars sub-theme.
2014
15m
250w
What were the events that led to the Suez Crisis in 1956? How did it deal a final blow to Britain’s self-image as a world power?
Mapping rationale: Nationalisation of the Canal, Anglo-French-Israeli invasion, US pressure and British humiliation as the death of Britain’s imperial self-image — Decolonization sub-theme.
2014
15m
250w
The New Economic Policy — 1921 of Lenin had influenced the policies adopted by India soon after independence. Evaluate.
Mapping rationale: Soviet NEP’s mixed-economy model as intellectual influence on Nehruvian planning and state capitalism in India — Socialism & Communism sub-theme.
2013
15m
250w
American Revolution was an economic revolt against mercantilism. Substantiate.
Mapping rationale: Navigation Acts, taxation without representation, and colonial economic grievances as the material basis of the American independence movement.
2013
15m
250w
Africa was chopped into states artificially created by accident of European competition. Analyse.
Mapping rationale: Berlin Conference 1884-85, Scramble for Africa, and arbitrary boundary-drawing as the origin of post-colonial African state fragility — Rise of Nationalism sub-theme.
2013
15m
250w
“Latecomer” industrial revolution in Japan involved certain factors that were markedly different from what the West had experienced.
Mapping rationale: State-led Meiji industrialisation, zaibatsu system, and technology import as features distinguishing Japanese from Western industrial development.
2013
15m
250w
What policy instruments were deployed to contain the great economic depression?
Mapping rationale: New Deal, Keynesian fiscal policy, gold standard abandonment, protectionism — interwar economic policy responses as World Wars / Interwar sub-theme.
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