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Globalisation
Globalisation
Freedom is indivisible the chains on any one of my people were the chains on all
of them, the chains on all of my people were the chains on me.
Famines, epidemics, plagues are inevitable and maintain balance of population and
resources.
Against
Growth in S&T
3.Economic inequality
against it.
Effects
1.Politically
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Devolving powers from centre to states is a much needed reform for ostracised
states..
Social Security
Rural story
Dalits were subordinate and meant for menial works like scavenging etc
Landowning powerful castes whether SCs etc arose from land reforms after
independence.
Reforms in process
Global village
Homogenous culture
Glocalisation
Mc Donald's doesnot sell beef products in India inspite of its high demand abroad.
Moreover, it goes vegetarian during Navaratri festival.
Reassertion of local values
Food habits
Yoga day (23rd June) declared, Ramdev baba teaching Yoga abroad, Indian ayurveda
medicines globally.
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Impact of globalisation
Outsourcing
4.Financial instability
5.Degrading culture
Objectification of women
Positive of Globalisation
Cultural homogeneity more options in clothes, food and others like Burger, Jeans
Cultural heterogeneity
Technology
Against
Traditions diluted westernisation
State withdraw from welfare activities and leave it for private firms, MNCs
Health, education may deteriorate
New concept
Regionalism
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Regionalism
India?
A double edged sword preservation of culture may harass outsiders who are
Indians which disturbs social harmony
Economic inequality is the root cause migrants take jobs of local people as
skills are not adequate in locals vindictive attitude develops.
development.
Realisation by people that the reason for backwardness of region lies in them.
SECULAR INDIA
In Chennai floods, muslims rescued hindus and vice versa Hindus cleaned mosques
while Muslims cleaned temples a Hindu couple
named their son Yunus after her mother was rescued from water in labour.
The economy which is a network of material relations, can always be revived, but
the society which is a
network of human relations based on trust cannot be repaired easily once damaged.
T.M. Scanlons now classic essay, The Difficulty of Tolerance, offers materials
for an attractive affirmative answer:
Tolerance is valuable for its own sake because of the attitude it allows us to
bear towards our fellow citizens, an
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of society.
The legal battle over the AMUs minority character dates back to October 20, 1967,
when the Supreme Court in S. Azeez Basha and another
versus Union of India, deviating from the broad spirit in which it had decided
other cases on educational rights of minorities, erroneously concluded
on narrow and technical grounds that the AMU was established by the Central
legislature and not by Muslims. This led to a wave of angry
AMUs minority status. The word establish in the title of the act was deleted,
and Section 2(l) and Subsection 5(2)(c) were added, clarifying that
AMU.
Establish refers to construction by the central government but AMU was only
incorporated in the Indian system as a university by the 1920 act. It has
been there for protecting educational rights of minorities the muslims per se.
earn less wages less chances of employment in formal sector mostly unemployed
19851990 mass exodus due to religious polarisation. Land reforms too made them a
minority in majority Muslim
areas.
Government support through cash assistance of Rs 6600 per month with free ration
depending on nonrelief category
which include pensioner and employed and relief who are dependent.
Problems
1.Separate enclaves
2.Unwilling population
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3.State government
Way ahead
1.Assimilation in Kashmir
Very tough as religious polarisation, separatists gaining wind will prevent their
assimilation
INDIAN SECULARISM
Other side
establish uniform society, although India acts differently. (though 1984 riots
show how non state actors played in
connivance with state)
#Hindu and Muslim fundamentalists prefer using social disturbances like riots etc
to establish a nationstate. The
same measures were followed by colonial power (Divide & Rule) where secularism was
a populist measure but social
# Muslim secularism
Muslims in minority talk about secularism but in majority prefer having an islamic
state. They reason that Indian
#Hindu nationalism
It stresses on cultural and social values rather than pure majority state. It is
tolerant and prefer to use "nationalism as
an antonym of communalism".
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Communal violence
Only if all these are fulfilled then state declares it as a communal disturbance.
A rape case with intention of
2.Rehabilitation
20% of rehabilitation to victims immediately and rest later. There is no time and
dispensal authority specified.
They can be awarded punishment upto 1 year if found guilty. But they can hold
office. Only, when state government
4.Ambiguous role
Moreover state and district collector both can form unified command to direct
forces. Dual role creates ambiguity.
5.Armed forces
6.Witness protection
MINORITIES
Sachar Committee Muslims38% in urban and 28% in rural below poverty level.
2015 Report of The US Commission for International Religious Freedom put India in
tier 11 countries where atrocities
Tier I countries are of particular concern where tier II are in watch list. India
is in tier II since 2009
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Reasons
Schemes by government
1.Economic initiative
Himayat
2.Educational support
fundamentalism
Many others from Europe who want to join ISIS are well educated.
Hence Islam's role in supporting these groups cannot be overlooked and is open to
criticism
2.Religious nationalism
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Godse statue by Hindu Mahasabha
Tagore
My View
Gandhi was trying to consolidate fractious Hindu society in one group who can put
up a nonviolent struggle against
British.
However, Muslims never came on board and became apprehensive about majoritarian
Hinduism after
independence.
This led to dissents and violence perpetrated by Hindu &Islamic fringe groups.
But, naive people hold Gandhi
responsible.
Race, caste, creed etc take a backseat when organ donation and compatibility
depends on your genes.
People donate organs to save life irrespective of the recipient's religion, caste,
creed etc.
Intolerance in India?
Harassing artists in the name of cow protection Divine Bovine in Jaipur Artist
Festival
I beg to differ as schools are the basic level platform for a cosmopolitan
culture. If students celebrate festivals of various religions together then it will
foster harmony. In the very beginning they would practically come to understand
about each other culture and religion. This will eliminate doubts and
prejudices which they are poised to develop with time from localised groups.
4 per cent of Muslim children are in Madarsas, where as 66 per cent attend
government schools and 30 per cent private schools.
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25% of Muslim children never went to schools or were dropouts after enrollment.
CENSUS 2011
14.23% Muslims in India only 6.27% Muslims employed in 17.3 Lakhs strong police
forces of India.
Muslims in Bengal are more deprived in terms of education, health with 7% lower
literacy rate than the average.
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Casteism
education, they have broken these shackles and demand equal rights as citizens of
India. The constitution of India guarantees them their lost human
rights in the form of Fundamental rights enshrined in Articles 1332. Still, many
dalits live in fear as their livelihood depends on the upper castes who
are the elites of villages. The state does not have enough jobs and majority of
Dalits are unskilled. This further make their chances of employment in
modern knowledge based economies dim. Laws have been formulated for their social
equality but economic security has not been guaranteed which
Moreover, reservations are enjoyed by kins of those who have taken it already
because they had a good primary and secondary education missing
RS has further created tensions and divisions among people and their is a growing
consciousness of castes among young population. Hence there is
The change in mindsets and behavior of Indian population will have massive
effects. This change will come gradually and must start from schools in
rural areas. When teachers and students do not discriminate against dalit students
a real equality will emerge. Gandhi said that India lives in villages
The law should also influence the ideas and thoughts of the individual. Prevention
of Atrocities against SC/ST act 1989 tries to do that.
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nationalism that this social system has been perfected for all time to
come by our ancestors..This is the reason why we think that our one
the nations there do not have that physical repulsion, one for the
other, that we have between different castes.And can we ever hope
that these moral barriers against our race amalgamation will not stand
in the way of our political unity?
A day will come when unvanquished Man will win back his lost human
heritage.
Manual Scavenging
from Dalit communities who continue to be employed in this job in this country and
who work in the 96 lakh private and community dry latrines
managed by municipalities.
Bhangis in Gujarat, Pakhis in Andhra Pradesh and Sikkaliars in Tamil Nadu live in
separate settlements, are not allowed entry in public places like
temples etc
1993 Employment of Manual Scavengers and Construction of Dry Latrines Act not
implemented effectively
The Census of 2011 found 794,000 cases of manual scavenging, of which 63,713 were
in Maharashtra.
The majority of manual scavengers are women and there could be more than a million
of them since the Indian Railways spreads human
The history of India is the history of a struggle between the entitled and the
disentitled. The ABVP, claiming to represent the Hindu society, is
the entitled. The Dalits are the disentitled. The fourtier arrangement in Hindu
society did not include Dalits. If anyone defied the fourtier arrangement
Workplace complaints high with both SC and ST panels as shown by a RTI filed at
NCSC/ST/BC
It is not a rule that caste system always plays an important role in elections.
The constitution of India guarantees free and fair elections.
First of all, universal suffrage means that every man has the right to vote a
candidate or a party of own choice. People from reserved seats are
elections which would have been victorious always if a community favored voting to
him/her.
Reservation
The 201415 Economic Survey showed that the wages of rural India were increasing at
3.6 per cent only (when the inflation rate was above 5
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These jobs are precarious and badly paid. In the private sector, the average daily
earnings of the workers was Rs 249 in 201112, according to the
Labour Bureau, and those of the employees at large, Rs 388. By contrast, in the
public sector, the figures were respectively almost three times
There were 19.5 million jobs in the public sector in 199293 when Indias
population was 839 million. While there are 1.2 billion Indians now,
the number of jobs in the public sector has shrunk to 17.6 million. In states that
have aggressively implemented the liberalisation policy, government
jobs have almost disappeared. For instance, the governments share in employment
in Gujarat is only 1.18 per cent whereas it is 16 per cent in
Kerala.
INTERCASTE Marriages
Lata Singh vs State of UPSC said, "Intercaste marriages are in national interest
as they will help in abolishing caste system.
I fear that I will have to think twice before holding my partners hand in public.
I feel that the government is telling us that we can work, we can have
20.5 Lakhs increase in disabled population of 1.87 crores in 2001 to 20.07 crores
in 2011
2.21% of population.
Opinion that disabled will not perform equal to physically normal people.
Skills are never checked IAS 2014 topper disabled but much able than many.
parents, society treat them differently, include them as normal people but have
facilities which create level playing field acknowledge these
differences
Raahgiri Day
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Schemes
Four years of education after elementary education for 8 years under Persons
with disabilities act, 1995
Grantinaid to NGOs
with disabilities.
2007, India became a signatory to amend national laws on disability with a new
one
The act calls for the government to take the necessary steps to ensure the
prevention of disabilities. In accordance with this agenda, the government
must screen all the children at least once a year to determine risk factors that
lead to disability and attempt to protect the child from such
factors. It is also necessary for the state to take measure to reduce risks to
prenatal and post natal mothers and child.
to integrate children with disabilities into regular schools, but also make space
for special schools that cater expressly to the needs of these
children. In addition to the basic education schools, government are also required
to make nonformal education programmes for children with
disabilities that help attain literacy, rejoin school, impart vocational training,
and provide them with free books and educational material. Teachers
need to be specially trained to educate and see to the needs of children with
disabilities. The government must also set up schemes that provide
children with disabilities grant and scholarships and also provide funds for
making buildings disabled friendly. Educational institutions are also
required to provide visually challenged students with aids who will write for
them.
buses, road signals pavement slopes, warning signals, building ramps, Braille
signs and auditory signals, etc. The act also provides for non
Demands are being made by disabled persons, civil society and Ministry of Social
Justice and Empowerment to replace full guardianship by limited
guardianship.
isabilities related to movement, hearing and sight are the most common, according
to the Census
Issues
4.Government apathy as they are not a considerable or joint population for vote
banks.
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Way ahead
1.Education, health
3.Skill development
Longitudnal Aging Study of India to follow the health and socioeconomic condition
of 60,000 Indians over the age of 45 years for 25 years An
National Old Age Pension Scheme (IGNOAPS) challenge is regarding the amount and
the target population. The centre provides a meagre
amount (200). The states contribute according to their capacity. This makes
elderly in one state disadvantaged and dependent on states economic
performance
Issues
1.Urbanisation
Skills imparted by elderly no longer important material success has gained over
ethical skills
Hence in urban areas such skills are imparted in schools, colleges and demand for
values is low.
3.Dual employment
New trend of grandparents for taking care of children in urban areas is emerging.
4.Economic
SOLUTIONS
Prevalent in west
2.
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WOMEN/Child
SourceURL:
http://feedly.com/i/subscription/feed/http://indianexpress.com/section/opinion/feed
/
Swami Vivekanand
Recent case of Richa Mishra where she was ordered by SC to be appointed as DSP
state denied such appointment on the basis of her crossing the
Kudgili woman dsp resigned after repeated inefficiency in work due to corruption
and political interference.
Statistics
Individual is interviewed about the time spent on various activities over a given
time period.
Ambedkar
Rights are protected not by law but by social and moral conscience of the society.
Why are men not happy when women assume positions of responsibility?
Justice Verma committee
"Rape and sexual assaults are not crimes of passion but an expression of power"
Social Progress Index places India at 101th due to poor performance in health
water sanitation and safety
India at 120 among 131 countries in women labour participation, according to the
International Labour Organisation, trailing Brazil, China and
Recent Beijing plus 20 review Beijing declaration and platform for action for
women empowerment
Sexual abuses are more commonly done by close relatives and people in authority.
Raunak Jahan pointed out change in policies from women in development to women and
development.
The definition of domestic violence should include physical, economic, sexual and
verbal and emotional abuse
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This law is a very significant step because it recognises ... The right of women
to live in a shared household... women can get a protection order
against any further violence... Women can get monetary relief to meet their
expenses including medical costs.
Often women who face violence or are abused are seen as victims. But women
struggle in several different ways to survive these situations.
What is needed is not mere increase in number of women in jobs but increased
welcome of women
companies show increased profits with balance between number of men and women in
office.
Mending gender gap could add 60 % to Indian GDP by 2025 by increasing women
participation rate to 41% from present rate of 31%.
However, the idea is only to create awareness if marginal benefits then should
women not work? Definitely not the larger picture is of human
Bias in job
No common cadre for women and men but women relegated only to cases related to
women.
Rather than women police stations which segregate women there should be women
police officials in every police station.
CAPITAL CONUNDRUM
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Kerala 5853 + Tamil Nadu 280.9
Pink collared jobs for women women believed to have soft skills
The crime against women during the year 2013 has increased by 26.7% over the
year 2012 and by 51.9% over the year 2009.
Dowry related cases form 17% of violences against women and are on rise.
Male voter turnout in Lok Sabha elections has grown only slightly, from 60.87 per
cent of registered voters in 1971 to 67 per cent in 2014.
Female voter turnout grew by more than twice as much in the same period, from
49.11 per cent to 65.54 per cent.
In the general elections of 2014, womens turnout shot up from 55.82 to 65.63 per
cent a jump of nearly 20 per cent
Reservation apart, parties give far fewer tickets to women. The reason given is
its difficult for them to win.
But ,in 2014, women were 7.9 per cent of total candidates, but 11.6 per cent of
elected MPs.
Parties must give them more tickets and voters should vote only for those parties
that give a fair share of tickets to women.
In 21 of 30 Indian States, female voter turnout exceeded male turnout in their
most recent assembly elections, an analysis of Election Commission
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In the remaining nine Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Delhi, Gujarat, Haryana, Karnataka,
Kerala, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra the gap
between male and female turnouts has narrowed to its sharpest point.
Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat and Maharashtra are the States with the largest remaining
difference between male and female turnout
In Gujarat, the ECI identified specific communities like the Kathi Darbar
community in Amreli district which did not believe women should play a
part in the democratic process and targeted awareness programmes at them to raise
female turnout.
Child Marriage
of mothers below 15 years of age more common during Maha Sihivratri festival
Moreover, mandals oppose any interference in the name of tradition thus the need
is dual approach of creating awareness as well as using law.
Issues
1.Political vote banks
Political persons patronise khap panchayats which allow child marriage overlooking
its harms.
Prohibition of child marraige act,2006 (UNICEF male21 years and Female18 years for
child marriage,Supported by this act)
3.Ubiquitous causes
Low dowry in child marriage, lessening burden from a family with more girl child,
relief from protecting girls from sexual predators
Stressing on health related aspects of early marriage on a girl and her child.
Conservative people need to be made aware of girl's right to decide her future on
education, marriage etc.
Women harassment
Violation of Article 14,15, 19(1)g, 21 (genderequality and right to work with men
with dignity)
Includes all places with >10 employees whether it is public, private institutions,
hospitals etc
Criticism: Does not include agricultural women and women in armed forces.
Under Section 134 companies act, 2013 companies must declare formation of ICC in
(AGM) Annual General Meetings
Half of members to be women (A senior women employee, an NGO women member etc)
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Criticism: This is an under reported crime in India. It may deter women from
complaining
Criminal law Amendment bill, 2013 brought Section 354 of IPC in force with sexual
harassment under it. (After Delhi gangrape, 2012)
Section 154, 161 of Criminal PC Cases to be heard by women police officers only
2.Vishakha guidelines
Vishakha (Women Rights Group) &others vs State of Rajasthan
Defined sexual harassment under which the above statute was passed in 2013
Men will understand gender equality in society and giving women equal opportunity.
Public can create awareness about women as a mother, sister, daughter and most
important as a human being
India is a patriarchal society where freedom is domain of only one class and not
all
Will never create a sense of guilt in offenders as they would see the manner we
prefer keeping rapes a private affair and
apprehensive about its disclosure to public in fear of shame rather than fight
for justice.
2.International reputation
It was banned to prevent global outrage and save India's socalled pride.
Though it ended in more people watching it. Still, alot of people who not have
access to internet were unaffected.
Khap Panchayats
In Haryana, known for notorious decisions took a watershed decision to ban female
foeticide in the state.
Celebrities like Aamir Khan work for social issues then effect is massive,
poignant.
When they have a girl child change comes as daughters are more emotionally
attached to parents and care for them.
When they understand that daughters can hold responsibility for the family and are
nevertheless than sons, change would come
Talk practically
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1.Social problems
Women are considered weak, protected always which gives them a feeling of
subordinates in society. Moreover they grow suspicious about the
social norms.
Female foeticide, sex determination etc Child sex ratio (06 years) declined from
947 in 1991 to 927 in 2001 to 918 in 2011 as per census.
Education not given Female literacy rate51% as compared to 75% of males. Female
youth literacy rate (1524 years)65% as compared to 81%
of males.
Dowry system, caste system, families apprehensive of rapes as girls are vulnerable
Khap Panchayats erroneous decisons in Haryana (worst child sex ratio below 850)
Dalit, Adivasi and Muslim girls drop out of school in large numbers. This is a
combined outcome of poverty, social discrimination and the lack
2.Economic problems
Household works not paid even more work done than men. it has been found that
women work more than men in hours but their works are not
aspect of life.
NSS 68th round survey 201112, Bihar's rural women work participation rate 5.5
Property rights absent none of women in Bihar have lands in their name.
Strangely with economic boom in India women moved from paid to unpaid jobs as
family income increased.
3.Political problems
PRIs not helpful enough as male dominates in home. Women only carry position but
official work is done by men.
PRIs not consulted for planning as per Article 280. Planning is also not done in
consultation with them. This does not give them real power
Women representation in legislative bodies poor. Below average of Asian and global
countries. (Pakistan has better representation). 16th LKS Has
Government initiatives
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being over age. SC reiterated that 10 years relaxation in age must be allotted for
empowerment of women
3.73rd&74th Amendment
Environment of equality
Microcredit to women
Gender budgeting
Right to education
En cash at 21 years
8.Education initiatives
A corpus of 100 crores allotted from budget, 100 crores from "Care and Protection
of Girl childA multi sectoral approach" from 12th five year plan
Objectives
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Way Ahead
1.Implementation
Corruption to be checked.
and development)
2.Education
Education which is liberal modern and gender sensitive of girl child is very
important
Will make her responsible, independent, earn a name in society, fight for her
rights, enjoy programmes for them etc.
Education to men
Families need to be taught (Behaviour Change Communication) both men and women
need change in attitude.
Moral overhauling of patriarchal society will benefit
3.Social reforms
the society.
7. Amending of laws related to dowry act, 1961 like Section 498A of IPC where
complaints are noncompoundable.
It will serve as a guide for states and the centre to formulate policies.
Census 2011, District Level Health Survey, Unified District Information System for
Education data was used
Marital rape
NFHS data shows that 8.5% of women faced sexual violence in their lifetime. About
93% said they have been sexually abused by their husbands.
Section 498A specifies only mental and physical abuse by husbands. Sexual abuse
should also be included.
Illiteracy
Personal matter
GuardianshipMother or Father?
SC judgment in which a women was declared sole guardian of her child with no
requirement of details of father
Under Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act, a child's guardian for person and
property is first father and then mother
Effects
1.Women empowerment
But single mothers, divorced mothers had problems in getting children enrolled in
schools, scholarships etc
Making mother as a primary guardian does not affect nurturing of child as mothers
are equally capable in modern world.
Lets use mothers name for middle name of your child. Even a same effort will work
wonders.
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Dimapur Jail(Nagaland where mob killed a rapist) incident did not make its streets
safer for women but the air dangerous for everyone
Poor implementation (Domestic Violence Act didnot take off Renamed as SAAHAS,
allocated 50 crores last year)
Verma committee report,2012 formed report submitted 2013 under CJI Justice Verma,
(Currently shelved)
Rape should not be assessed according to relationships between the victim and
culprit. For example, marital rapes should be charged as a crime.
Obligation of state to provide women quicker trial and justice against criminal
cases of sexual harassment and enhancing punishment of the
accused.
Trafficking for prostitution is punishable. Slavery and other evils are not under
Antitrafficking act.
Electoral reforms should be done and candidates, MPs, MLAs disqualified with
framing of charges in sexual offences.
Soldiers in AFSPA regulated areas indulging in sexual crimes should not be waited
for prior central sanction before prosecution. The same applies
http://www.prsindia.org/parliamenttrack/reportsummaries/justicevermacommitteereport
summary2628/
UNODC (United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime):
India is placed at 85th among 121 countries for rapes and 39th for unreported
rapes.
2.Women's autonomy
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Purdah system a burden of upper caste hindus, Burkha etc in muslims along with
conservative beliefs mar women's autonomy.
Even in a matrilineal society like Manipur etc women have land succession rights
but decisions are made by males within the family.
Education
Political empowerment
India127
Sri Lanka 75
Nepal 98
Bhutan102
Bangladesh 115
Planning, programming and budgeting for gender equality and women rights
Gender Budget Statement, 200506
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Lack of allocation of funds to National commission for women and state commissions
Delhi HC announced inclusion of women (even married daughters who are not included
in Joint family) as Kartas in Hindu Undivided Family thus
upholding the amendment in Hindu Succession Act 1956 which introduced Section 6
making women as equal coparcenors with men in property.
Big business houses can pass the baton to their daughters if required.
174th Report of the Law Commission of India had argued that when women are equal
in all respects of modernday life, there is no reason why
they should be deprived of the right and privilege of managing HUF as their karta.
Indian women as fighter pilots in IAF opening of women to all combat roles in
armed forces a new era in reckoning.
Sterlisation in India
Kerala with voluntary family planning due to literacy, women empowerment, social
welfare, PDS etc
Issues
2.Gender bias
Tubectomy is a complex procedure than Vasectomy where patients walk out of OTs.
male sterlisation is risky and female sterlisation should be promoted and not
erode the votebank.
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Trained paramedics give anaesthesia and PHC doctors with less experience perform
surgeries. PPP is a total failure in RSBY as private players donot go to
Indian population has started showing slowing of birth rate. population control in
haste is not needed. Emergency time forced male sterlisation like steps are not
needed.
Legalising Prostitution
Tamil Nadu have published these plans. Even today more than a year
after this law was passed 74 per cent of child domestic workers are
One of the most important problem is identifying cause of sex work whether it is
due to coercion or out of choice.
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EFFECTS
3.Patriarchal society
Identification and licensing will make their life miserable. they can be
harassed more frequently by Police. Anonymity will be
They will be affected the most and can be forced into sex slavery, trafficking.
POSITIVE
1.Better identification
Sexworkers can be licensed and their concerns can be heard by the government.
Welfare measures, rehabilitation, protection from traffickers will be possible.
2. Better regulation
Govt. can regulate sex trade effectively. Buyers can be punished. Violence with
sex workers can be checked. STD related awareness can be propagated.
Sex workers are given loans, financial help. It has helped them teach their
children and meet other needs.
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Women on TV
13 members from statutory bodies such as NC for Women, NC for minorities apart
from broadcasters.
Code evolved from All India Radio zero tolerance for broadcasters disregarding
advisories and has power to impose fine.
Freedom of speech and expression does not mean undermining of public morality
(article 19(2)). A little restraint is warranted.
TVs have a wide reach and children are influenced a lot. A wrong image of women
portrayed in these serials may misled some.
With growing reach there is a need of precautionary advice for viewers and
broadccasters.
CHILD LABOUR
Clauses
They can work in family profession if not hazardous hazardous activities reduced
from 83 to 3
One can exploit children easily violation of RTE 21A, DPSP Article 45
In view of poor state of the country, nonidentification of child
labour/trafficking, improper or nonrehabilitation of children
Issue
Government is giving excuses rather then countering child labour with strict
regulations and proper rehabilitation
Tremendous manpower in India but identification, checking child labour has been
the domain of NGOs.
Above bill will prevent children from studying, growing as nonhazardous works too
take toll on child's health.
Families would pull out children from schools and send them to factories Girls
will suffer more.
For exA carpenter, cobbler, manual scavenger's child will follow their
professions.Salt worker's at Kuchh will rope in their child in
What will be the outcome of that education which does not guarantee child
development in all fields?
Maternity/Paternity Leave
The Labour Ministry, on the recommendation of the Ministry of Women and Child
Development, will amend the Maternity Benefit Act, 1961, to
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1997 Central Civil Services Rule, Paternity leave for 15 days with less than 2
surviving children in government servants
Facebook gave paternity leave benefits to men Sweden allows it Germany, ICeland
too
Sex ratio
Men 79.10 H
^^^^^^^^^^
Indian women weigh less at the end of pregnancy than subsaharan African women as
shown by NFHS in 201314
Issues
Cash transfer of Rs 6,000 which requires women with registered pregnancies, taking
iron and folic acid tablets, breast feeding etc as conditions
But women in India face alot of hurdles familial discrimination household works
in pregnancy etc which can cause defaults in meeting conditions
Rs 1400 of JSY and Rs 6,000 are not enough to raise more children school, health
costs are way beyond these limits
Women need milk, vegetables, eggs etc to feed themselves during pregnancy in an
adverse environment with busy spouse and inconsiderate in
laws these entitlements can only come to their and baby's rescue improve maternal
health
Such conditional transfers can only succeed if government assures health services
completely like in Latin America but that is not the case in India
For
Doctors at fault
Women police officers have predictably lamented the lack of basic facilities like
toilets, changing rooms and restrooms in police stations. They have
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mentioned the lack of respect from male colleagues as a strong demotivator. Being
assigned only specific duties has limited their horizons and
hindered their professional growth. But the police station culture is yet to
appreciate this need for growth and is comfortable in assigning them soft
postings and routine tasks like reception desks, wireless or computer duties
Recent case of Sabrimala, Shani Singapur, Haji Ali Dargah where women demanded
entry in the main shrine.
Issues
Article 25(1) provides freedom to practice and propagate religion Such barriers
interfere with proper exercise of this Fundamental right
However, this right is enforceable only against state Travancore Devasom Board
runs Sabrimala and it is an autonomous institution funded by
But SC can decide in cases where two private individuals are in tussle where
one of them is not able to exercise Article 25(1) It can direct the
temple which is a private body accordingly.
SC through its decisions have made clear that a religions essential principles
cannot be amended by court or state in the name of freedom or liberty
Article 26(b) allows religious institutions to manage their own affairs hence a
tussle between Article 19(1), Article 14 arises and court's jurisdiction
is needed.
Kerala Hindu Places of Public Worship (Authorisation of Entry) Rules 1965 permits
or prohibits women from accessing places of worship where
SC can quash this nonentry law as personal laws are exempt from application of
constitution but not mere customs.
Gender equality has caught wind now and the demand for UCC may get fueled along
with it.
*Beriya and Nat communities involved in Devadasi system Dalit girls in Uttangi
Mala Durga Temple in Devanagri district, Karnataka
TRAFFICKING
Adoption
201415 approx 4000 incountry adoptions and 370 intercountry ones information
received on PIL filed by an NGO related to child rights, Advait
Foundation
Bonded Labour
Collector will have to sign slips every month for proper dispensal of Rs 1.25
lakhs to rescued bonded child, adult or women
Crossborder trafficking
A nonissue for Indian and foreign counterparts NGOs too focused on internal
trafficking
Women, children, adults from Bangladesh trafficked across borders through Cooch
Behar, 24 Parganas, Murshidabad etc
Victims are not properly rehabilitated not sent back to home but treated as
criminal according to Idnian laws
Section 370 and Section 370A included in IPC after amendmnet of Criminal Law in
2013 does not include forced labour
Immoral Traffic Prevention Act 1956 too not includes forced labour which is the
most commonest result of human trafficking
Indian laws does not target traffickers strictly Section 366B of IPC mandates
punishment for trafficking girls below 21 years of age but police staff
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AVTAR with Working Mother Media, a global gender parity organisation ranking
companies best for women in India.
Q.Juveniles in India commit crimes with impunity. Critically analyse and suggest
measures to curb juvenile delinquency.
A heinous offence is defined as one for which the minimum punishment under the
Indian Penal Code is seven years
in 2013. .
The number of rape cases registered against juveniles was approximately 2,000 and
theft ranked highest at 6,705.
States which saw the highest number of juveniles accused of and apprehended for
rape in 2014 were Madhya Pradesh (343),
Maharashtra (208), Uttar Pradesh (176) and Rajasthan (149). Delhi stood at 120.
The law relating to young people went through a number of changes until the
Juvenile Justice Act, 1986, defined juveniles as under 16 for boys and
In 2000, India raised its definition of a male juvenile to 18 from 16 under the
Juvenile Justice Act. Doing so was part of the nations obligations under
the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, which it signed in 1992.
Other signatories, including the U.S. and the U.K., also fixed the upper age for
minors at 18. But, unlike India, criminal law in both countries provides
Activists have also criticized Indias juvenile laws for being too lenient. The
maximum punishment under the law, even for offenses such as rape and
imprisonment. Until 2005, minors could also be sentenced to death in the U.S.
from the U.S.has suggested that transferring children to adult courts results in
high rates of pretrial detention, harsher sentences, placement of
Germany, those over 18 but under 21 can be transferred from adult to youth courts.
In India, offenders can remain in youth reformatories after they
alleged crimes, is seven. This is one of the youngest worldwide. In, Pakistan is
13
Those younger than this must still be held responsible for their actions, but in a
nonpunitive, welfare and education oriented manner, according to a
That report said South Asia has the lowest regional average minimum age of
criminal responsibility in the world, at seven years old. In the Americas
Western Europe it is 13
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Section 7A
Any child at the time of committing crime if was below 18 years then he/she is
liable to be sent for Juvenile Justice Board.
Issues:
1.Late verdicts
Cases brought to notice have passed considerable amount of time in which juvenile
has already crossed 18 years. This results from the
institutional short comings of Indian justice system rather than a flaw of law.
2.Making all pay for few
People contested that juveniles commit heinous crimes like rape, murder etc their
age must be decreased from 18 to 16 years. However, records
According to National Crime Records Bureau, only 1.2% of total are juvenile crimes
, 58% are involved in rape,murder with >65% related to thefts
Suppose a juvenile who steals a pen and a juvenile of same age involving in rapes,
murders are given same punishment. Isn't it injustice?
Moreover how to compensate victims and relatives aggrieving of their loss? Will
they be satisfied with petty verdicts of punishment to juveniles?
Way ahead
Classification of cases is needed rather than putting everyone in the same frame.
JJ act, 2014 does the same by making 1618 years children indulging in heinous
crimes treated differently.
2.Maturity analysis
Some people want courts to check the maturity rather than JJBs etc.
3.Age should be amended or not (Juveniles upper limit was 16 till 2000 and was
changed to 18 afterwards. (in consensus with UN)
Juveniles belong to a tender age group. They are mostly not aware of the crimes
being committed. Moreover, majority of them belong to lower
classes who have never had or passed more than elementary education.
Lack of proper education, poor guidance of parents as they too are daily wage
earners, domestic helpers or in menial jobs prevent their proper
US report says that children sent to jail had worse outcomes than those who
avoided terms.
JHs, remand homes etc contain children for some time before they are properly
mature to mix in the society. It tries to inculcate qualities needed
Harsh punishments can deter the crime but the future of teenager is lost. He is
liable to become a more hard criminal in future as the society had
only rejected him years before due to a crime committed in an immature age.
However, Indian jails, remand homes are in poor conditions where child may not get
proper attention. But, solution lies in filling these
Provide them safe education. health facilities and then check their activities.
5.Adult abetter
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JJ Act 2014
Defines juveniles as children
o The bill clearly defines and classifies offences as petty, serious and
heinous, and defines differentiated processes for each category.
The proposed new law gives the Juvenile Justice Board the power to
assess whether the perpetrator of a heinous crime aged between
o The Bill strikes a fine balance between the demands of the stakeholders
asking for continued protection of rights of juveniles and the
Any one who sells a child below 18 years of age products like tobacco will face
rigorous imprisonment up to 7 years and a fine up to Rs 1,00,000
It highlights the two main bodies that will deal with these children, to be set up
in each district:
Juvenile Justice Boards (JJBs) and Child Welfare Committees (CWCs) proper
guidelines with time bound results have been mentioned.
(i) a heinous offence is an offence that attracts a minimum penalty of seven years
imprisonment under any existing law,
(ii) a serious offence is one that gets imprisonment between three to seven years
and,
Issues
Article 14 (right to equality) and Article 21 (requiring that laws and procedures
are fair and reasonable). The provision also counters the spirit of
Article 20(1) by according a higher penalty for the same offence, if the person is
apprehended after 21 years of age.
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Modern India
SourceURL:
http://feedly.com/i/subscription/feed/http://indianexpress.com/section/opinion/feed
/
RAMA DEVI
Disciple of Gandhiji
Broke salt law in march 1930 (along with Dandi March) in west coast of India,
Inchudi on Balasore coast and Kujanga in cuttack.
WOMEN IN WAR
Dalit women Jahlkari Bai a look alike of Rani of Jhansi helped her escape
foreign alcohol and articles, sold Khadi and actively participated in National
Movements. They bravely faced the baton of the police and went behind
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the iron bars. Hundreds and thousands of Indian women dedicated their lives for
obtaining freedom of their motherland. Women have a special place
Mahatma Gandhi squarely summed up the strength of womanhood in his tribute to the
gender:
superior. Has she not greater intuition, is she not more self sacrificing, has she
not greater power of endurance, has she not greater courage?
Without her man would not be. If nonviolence is the law of our being, the future
is woman. I have nursed this thought now for years.
The list of great women whose names have gone down in history for their dedication
and undying devotion to the service of India is a long one. Here
are just few of them whose patriotism will be in the hearts of the million of
Indians forever.
Kitturu Rani Chennamma was the queen of the princely state of Kittur in Karnataka.
In 1824, 33 years before the 1857 war of independence, she
led an armed rebellion against the British in response to the Doctrine of lapse.
The resistance ended in her martyrdom and she is remembered today
as one of the earliest Indian rulers to have fought for independence. Along with
Abbakka Rani, Keladi Chennamma and Onake Obavva she
2.Rani of Jhansi(18281858).
Rani Laxmibai, popularly known as Rani of Jhansi was born on November 19, 1835
at Poona in a wealthy high class Brahmin family. She got married
to Raja Gangadhar Rao, the maharaja of Jhansi, in 1842. In 1851, she gave birth to
a child who unfortunately died just four months after his birth.
Being highly affected by this tragic incident Raja adopted Damodar Rao as his son.
She was not allowed to adopt a successor by the British, and
Jhansi was annexed. Considered by the British as the best and bravest military
leader of rebels this sparkling epitome of courage died a hero's death
in the battlefield.
the throne, the British put the state under court administration. Avantibai vowed
to win back her land from the British. She raised an army of four
thousand men and led it herself against the British in 1857. A fierce battle
ensured and Avantibai fought most valiantly but could not hold out for long
against the superior strength of the British army. When her defeat become imminent
she killed herself with her own sword and English army couldnt
defeat her in her life. Later Rani Avantibias sacrifice became a example to the
Lodhian kingdom and became history of the fight for freedom on 20
Begum Hazrat Mahal was the wife of Nawab Wajid Ali Shah of Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh,
Hazrat Mahal was known as the Begum of Avadh (Oudh).
She was stunning beautiful, and used her courage and leadership qualities to rebel
against the British East India Company during the First Indian War
of Independence.
After her husband had been sent away in exile to Calcutta, she with the
cooperation of a zealous hand of supporters like Sarafaddaulah, Bal Krishna,
Raja Jai Lal and Mammon Khan worked incessantly to revive the fortunes of Avadh.
She seized control of Lucknow in association with the
revolutionary forces and set up her son, Prince Birjis Qadir, as the ruler of
Avadh, Hazrat Mahal worked in association with Nana Saheb but later
escaped from Lucknow and joined the Maulavi of Faizabad in the attack on
Sahajahanpur. She rejected with the contempt the promises of allowance
and status held out to her by the British against whom her hatred was unrelenting.
In the end after bearing misfortune and misery throughout the
period of resistance, she found asylum in Nepal where she died in 1879.
5.Sarojinidevi Naidu(18791949)
Sarojini Naidu (Chattapadhya) was born on February 13, 1879 in Hyderabad. Her
major contribution was also in the field of poetry. She got
recognition as the when her collection of poems was published in 1905 under the
title Golden Threshold.
.In 1916, she met Mahatma Gandhi, and she totally directed her energy to the fight
for freedom. She would roam around the country like a general of
the army and pour enthusiasm among the hearts of Indians. She was responsible for
awakening the women of India. She traveled from state to state,
city after city and asked for the rights of the women. She reestablished
selfesteem within the women of India.
In 1925, she chaired the summit of Congress in Kanpur. In 1928, she came to the
USA with the message of the nonviolence movement from
Gandhiji. When in 1930, Gandhiji was arrested for a protest, she took the helms of
his movement. In 1931, she participated in the Round Table
Summit, along with Gandhiji and Pundit Malaviyaji. In 1942, she was arrested
during the Quit India protest and stayed in jail. After independence
she became the Governor of Uttar Pradesh. She was the first woman governor. On
March 2, 1949, she took her last breath.Her name will always
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couple of her classmates. Her group raised money to support the Chittagong based
revolutionaries and organized a readers forum to promote
patriotic spirit among the college students. On the direction of the party high
command Preetilata bought explosive implements from underground
The death of comrade Ardhendu Dastidar in the Jalalabad hill war on 22 April 1930
spurred her commitment to revolutionary causes.She demanded
Chittagong on 23 september 1932. Preetilata was a born rebel and was determined
not to surrender to the British colonists so the valiant rebel took
the Tamluk Police Station (of erstwhile Midnapore District) on September 29, 1942.
She was affectionately known as Gandhi buri, Bangla for old
lady Gandhi.
Matangini Hazra, who was 73 years at the time, led a procession of six thousand
supporters, mostly women volunteers, with the purpose of taking
over the Tamluk police station. When the procession reached the outskirts of the
town, they were ordered to disband under Section 144 of the Indian
Matangini led one procession from the north of the criminal court building even
after the firing commenced, she continued to advance
with the tricolour flag, leaving all the volunteers behind. The police shot her
three times. She continued marching despite wounds to the
As she was repeatedly shot, she kept chanting Vande Mataram, translating as hail
to the Motherland. She died with the flag of the Indian National
was imprisoned. She helped her husband in the cause of Indigo workers in
Champaran, Bihar and the No Tax Campaign in Kaira, Gujarat. She was
arrested twice for picketing liquor and foreign cloth shops, and in 1939 for
participating in the Rajkot Satyagraha.
Kasturba was deeply religious. Like her husband, she renounced all caste
distinctions and lived in ashrams. From 1904 to 1914, she was active in the
Phoenix Settlement near Durban. During the 1913 protest against working conditions
for Indians in South Africa, Kasturba was arrested and
sentenced to three months in a hard labor prison. In 1915, when Gandhi returned to
India to support indigo planters, Kasturba accompanied him. She
Kasturba suffered from chronic bronchitis. Stress from the Quit India Movements
arrests and ashram life caused her to fall ill. After contracting
pneumonia, she died from a severe heart attack on February 22, 1944.
revolutionaries Kshatriya Basu and Kanailal Datta, she joined the Chhatri Sangha.
The Chittagong Armory Raid took place on 18 April 1930 and Kalpana hurried back to
Chittagong and came in contact with Surya Sen in
May 1931. Kalpana was entrusted with the safe carrying of heavy explosive
materials from Calcutta. She also secretly prepared guncotton and
planned to plant a dynamite fuse under the court building and inside the jail to
free the revolutionary leaders, who were being tried in a special
Tribunal.
In Chittagong she organised the Kisans and womens fronts of the party. In 1946
she contested, though unsuccessfully, in the elections to the
Bengal Legislative Assembly. After 1947 she migrated to India and resigned from
active politics.Kalpana Datta breathed her last at New Delhi on 8
February 1995.
Lakshmi Sahgal (or Sahgal) ne Swaminathan, also known as Captain Lakshmi (born
October 24, 1914 in Madras, Madras Presidency, British
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Lakshmi received an MBBS degree from Madras Medical College in 1938. In 1940,she
left for Singapore where she established a clinic for the
poor, mostly migrant labour, from India. In 1943,Lakshmi joined the Rani of Jhansi
Regiment ,raised by Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose. She was given
the rank of a Colonel. The unit had the strength of a Brigade. In a regular army,
this womens army unit was the first of its kind in Asia. The army
fought on the side of the Axis powers against the British.She became the Minister
in charge of Womens Organization in Arzi Hukumate Azad Hind
Beena Das from Orissa is wellknown in the history of Indian freedom fighting for
daring attack on English Governor and University Chancellor
Stanley Jackson, who was a symbol of a long and oppressive English colonial rule
in India. The incident took place during the 1932 convocation of
Calcutta University. She was given 9 years of imprisonment with labor Although she
was unsuccessful, her act inspired many a young mind of those
days.
After her release in 1939, she joined the Jugantar revolutionary club. She was
again imprisoned in 1942 for three years while she was the
An Assam girl Kanaklata Barua was a freedom fighter and martyr. On 20 September
1942, Under the leadership of the revolutionary Jyoti Prasad
symbols of the British Empire. Fearless Kanaklata Brua marched ahead and had to
face the bullets of the strong police force. She had laid down
Nellie Sengupta was among the English Women who came to India to dedicate her life
for its people. Though an outsider she proved herself as a
While studying in England, she met Jatindra Mohan Sengupta an Indian patriot and
got married. After her marriage, she associated sincerely with
her husbands work to letterate India from the bondage of British imperialism.She
was the inspiring power behind all his activities in the political field.
During the noncooperation movement she was arrested while selling khadi in
Chittagong (now in Bangladesh). She helped her husband when
he was involved in the strike of the Bengal Assam Railway men as well as steamer
service workers in support of the tea plantation laborers who were
Nellie was elected Congress President in 1933. It was a recognition for her
valuable contribution to the cause of Indias independence. Later Nellie
to social welfare work. She was elected unopposed to the East Pakistan(now
Bangladesh) Legislative Assembly from Chittagong.
Kamaladevi was born in a Saraswat family on 3 April 1903. But above everything,
she is remembered for her phenomenal role in reviving the
traditional handicrafts of India during the post independence era.As chief of the
Board of Handicrafts, she started the pension system for
craftsmen.
Kamaladevi fought against social evils that restricted the development of women.
She was an active member of the youth wing of INC (Indian
She became an early supporter of the nations swadeshi mission and also
participated in the nationwide noncooperation movement
In her missionary zeal she championed the causes of women empowerment, education,
handicraft, theater along with her contribution to
the field of arts, crafts and writings. In her pursuit and commitment she turned
down many offers such as being nominated to the posts of the
Vice President of India, Governor of Orissa or Tamilnadu, Ambassador in Cairo or
Moscow.
As a befitting tribute to a cultural icon of India one can conclude with the words
of former President of India, R. Venkataraman, quoted , Flower buds
deeper impulses of society when they came into contact with her.
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Indira Priyadarshini was born Nov. 19, 1917 in Allahabad in northern India.
The most remarkable of women in modern Indias was Indira Gandhi who from her
early years was active in the national liberation struggle. During
the 1930 movement, she formed the Vanar Sena. A childrens brigade to help
freedom fighters.
She became a member of the Indian National Congress in 1938. Her public activity
entered a new phase with Indias Independence in 1947. She
took over the responsibility of running the Prime Ministers House. She worked
first as member of the Congress Working Committee in 1955 and later
as member of the Central Parliamentary Board in 1958. In 1959, she was elected
President of the Indian National Congress. She oriented
Congress thinking and action towards basic issues confronting Indian society and
enthused the younger generation the task of nationbuilding.
unity and solidarity of the nation. A staunch defender of the secular ideals of
the Constitution, she worked tirelessly for the social and economic
advancement of the minorities. She had a vision of a modern selfreliant and
dynamic economy.
She fought boldly and vigorously against communalism, obscurantism, and religious
fundamentalism of all types. She laid down her life in
defense of the ideals on which the unity and integrity of the Republic are
founded. She became the indomitable symbol of Indias selfrespect and
selfconfidence.
Sarala Debi
One of the gurus (inspirers) of anti Britsh armed movement in India (Bangla). She
played a great role in forming the network of Anushilan Samitis in
all major towns in united Bangla between 19001910. She worked hand in hand with
the other inspirers of the movement: Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Sri
Durga bhabhi SHE appeared like a meteor on the firmament of freedom struggle in
India and wielded tremendous influence on revolutionaries such
as Bhagat Singh, Ashfaqullah and Chandrashekhar Azad. Her name was Durgavati Devi
Annie Besant
A great woman, patriot and a true fighter, Annie Besant, was born in London on
October 1, 1847. She was a prominent Theosophist, social
reformer, political leader, women's rights activist, writer and orator. She fought
for the rights of Indian and was the first woman president of Indian
National Congress.
Annie Besant fought for women's rights, secularism, birth control, Fabian
socialism and workers' rights. She became a member of Theosophical
She toured the entire country of India to get first hand information about India
and middleclass Indians who were affected more by British rule and its
system of education. Her longtime interest in education resulted in the founding
of the Central Hindu College at Benares (1898).
She also became involved in Indian freedom movement. In 1916, she founded Home
Rule League which advocated self rule by Indians. She
became the President of Indian National Congress in 1917. She started a newspaper,
"New India", criticized British rule and was jailed for
sedition.
Sucheta Kriplani,
a great freedom fighter, was born in June 1908 in Ambala. After her studies she
started her career as a lecturer in Banaras Hindu University. Sucheta
was greatly inspired by the works of Mahatma Gandhi and in 1946 she joined the
Kasturba Gandhi Memorial Trust as Organizing Secretary. She was
actively involved in Quit India Movement and the partition riots. In 1946, she
went with Gandhi to Noakhali and there she became the real mother
of the victims of atrocities. She also got elected to the Constituent Assembly and
sang the national song in the Independence session of Constituent
Even after independence she had not stopped working for the weaker sections of the
society and was greatly involved in the upliftment of Indians. In
1952 and 1957, she was elected as the member of Lok Sabha and had also served as
the Minister of State. She was the first woman who was
Bhikaji Cama, also known as Madam Cama, was an outstanding lady of great courage,
fearlessness, integrity, perseverance and passion for
freedom. Madam Bhikhaji Cama was a pioneer amongst those who martyred their lives
for Indias freedom and was considered the mother of Indian
Revolution. Cama was born on September 24, 1861 in a rich Parsi family at Bombay.
Being a nationalist and a social worker Cama worked for
the victims of plague in 1896, Bombay Presidency. In 1902 she left for London and
there too she worked for promoting India freedom struggle. For
some time, she worked as private secretary to Dadabhai Navaroji, a great Indian
leader.
Bhikaji Cama has always been actively involved in fighting for gender equality She
was exiled by the Britishers from her motherland. In 1905,Cama
along with her friends designed the Indias first tricolor flag with green,
saffron and red stripes bearing the immortal words Bande Matram. On
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August 22, 1907, she raised the flag for India's Independence at the International
Socialist Conference in Stuttgart, Germany. There are many cities
in India that have streets and places being named after Bhikaiji Cama. On 26th
January 1962, the Indian Posts and Telegraphs Department issued a
stamp to acknowledge her work and give her honor. The Indian Coast Guard consists
of a ship that has been named after her.
Aruna Asaf Ali was a legendary heroine of India's freedom struggle and is widely
remembered for hoisting the Congress flag at Bombay during
the Quit India Movement. Aruna Asaf Ali was born at Kalka (Haryana) in an orthodox
Hindu Bengali family. She worked in the worst of slums to offer
aid to the poor and the exploited. Aruna Asaf Ali took active interest in Congress
programmes and joined the civil disobedience movement of 1930.
During Salt Satyagraha she was arrested and was sent to Lahore jail to serve a
oneyear prison term. She was held for participating in the 1932
movement and was put in Tihar Jail. In Tihar Jail she went on a hunger strike
against the treatment meted out to political prisoners. She is known as
In 1955 she became a Vice President of the All India Trade Union Congress. In 1958
she left the Communist Party of India and was elected Delhi's
first Mayor. She was awarded the Lenin Prize for peace in 1975 and the Jawahar Lal
Nehru award for International understanding for 1991. She was
awarded India's highest civilian award, the Bharat Ratna, and was honoured with a
stamp issued by the Indian Postal Service in 1998.
KAMLA NEHRU
Kamala Nehru wife of one of the most notable political figures in India Jawaharlal
Nehru ,took part in Non Cooperation Movement of 1921. She
convinced a large number of women in Allahabad to join hands with her in picketing
shops in the city that were selling foreign cloth and liquor.
VIJAYALAXMI PANDIT
The sister of Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, she was the first woman to become the
President of the United Nations General Assembly in 1979.
She was the first woman to hold a prestigious position in the cabinet. In the year
1937, she was elected to the provincial legislature of the United
Provinces and she became the minister of the local self governing body. She held
this position for two consecutive years. Later, in the year 1946, she
was reelected for this position. In the post independence period, she made an
entry into the diplomatic services and served as the ambassador of
India to various countries like Soviet Union, Ireland, United States and Mexico.
From 1962 to 1964, she served as the governor of Maharashtra.
Padmaja Naidu
Sarojinis daughter Miss Padmaja Naidu devoted herself to the cause of Nation like
her mother. At the age of 21, she entered the National scene and
became the joint founder of the Indian National Congress of Hyderabad. She spread
the message of Khadi and inspired people to boycott foreign
goods. She was jailed for taking part in the Quit India movement in 1942. After
Independence, she became the Governor of West Bengal. During
her public life spanning over half a century, she was associated with the Red
Cross.
Parbati Giri
Parbati Giri, nicknamed as the Mother Teresa of Western Orissa, was a prominent
female freedom fighter and activist for tribal rights from
Orissa, India . Giri was born in Samlaipadar village near Bijepur of the present
Bargarh district and undivided Sambalpur district in 19 January 1926.
Due to her antiBritish government activities, she was imprisoned for two
years.Parbati Giri was just 16 when she was in the forefront of agitation
following Mahatma Gandhis Quit India call. She continued to serve the nation
socially after independence. In 1955 she joined an American project
to improve the health and hygiene of the people of Sambalpur district. She started
an ashram for women and orphans called the Kasturba Gandhi
Matruniketan at Nrusinghanath, and another home for the destitute called Dr.
Santra Bal Niketan at Birasingh Gar under Jujomura block in Sambalpur
District. She worked in jail improvement and leprosy eradication. The Department
of Social Welfare of the government of India awarded her a
prize in 1984.
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INDIAN PRESS
The first newspaper in India was the Hickeys Gazette or Bengal Gazette
started on January 29, 1780 by an Irishman, James Augustus
Hickey. This weekly political and commercial paper declared itself as open to
all parties but influenced by none and its content included criticism of
the British East India Company. James Silk Buckingham, the Editor of the Calcutta
Journal established in 1818, was a social reformer and close
associate of Raja Ram Mohan Roy. Samachar Darpan in Bengali founded in 1818 was
the first regional language newspaper. The Times of India
was born on November 3, 1838 as The Bombay Times and Journal of Commerce. Its
Editor, Robert Knight used to upbraid British officials for
their nastiness towards Indians and for doing precious little to eradicate Indias
poverty. The Amrita Bazar Patrika was founded on February 20, 1868
as a Bengali weekly by Sisir Ghosh and Moti Lal Ghosh. It became instantly popular
because of its campaign against injustice and inequality. It
overnight turned into an English weekly from March 21, 1878 in order to escape the
provisions of the oppressive Vernacular Press Act. The Hindu
was founded in Madras in 1878 by the Triplicane Six a group of law students and
teachers Lokmanya Bal Gangadhar Tilak founded the Kesari in
1881 Dadabhai Naoroji established the Voice of India in 1883 Bande Mataram was
published in 1906 by Bipan Chandra Pal and edited by
Aurobindo Ghose Gopal Krishna Gokhale founded the Hitavada in1911 Tribune was
started by Dayal Singh Majithia in 1881. Motilal Nehru
started The Independent in 1919 and Mahatma Gandhi, the Indian Opinion in 1904 in
South Africa and Navjeevan and Young India in 1919 in
These trailblazers became the conscience keepers of the country and through their
relentless campaigns gave voice to the struggle for
independence.
Moderates were the brain of the congress and the nation and extremists were the
heart the former were the law and the latter impulse.
I have never found one among them (learned men) who could deny that a single
shelf of a good European library was worth the whole native
Gandhi
but I want you to realize Bhagat Singhs error. The way they pursued was wrong
and futile. I wish to tell these young men with all the authority with
which a father can speak to his children that the way of violence can only lead to
perdition.
Shaheed Bhagat Singh
"bombs and pistols do not make revolution. The sword of revolution is sharpened on
the whetting stone of ideas.
Ancient India
Map
Use your knowledge to make the answer as unique as possible and find out the
connections and causality.
OCP culture dated 15002000 B.C is the name given to a post harappan culture where
the specific type of Ochre coloured pottery was found. These potteries
were made of middle grained underfired clay and had a wash of ochre (easily rubbed
off) with colour varying from orange to red.
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Artefacts
Potteries constituted of jars, bowls, flasks etc. OCP culture was associated with
copper hoards at some places like Saipai where a copper harpoon was found
while excavation. At around 85 sites in U.P, Haryana, Bihar etc copper hoards like
axes, antennae swords, rings, celts etc were found accidentally while plowing,
making roads or digging canals. Terracota figures like bangles, beads were also
found.
Socioeconomic
These sites were situated along the river banks where mud was easily available.
Mounds were small sized, low in height. There was 58 kms distance between
settlements. It all suggests temporary nature of settlements. Lal Quila had houses
made of wattle and daub with fired mud plaster and impressions of bamboo and
OCP culture was a degenerated form of late harappan culture when urban was
replaced by a rural economy.
Early farming period in South India did not arise from huntergathering communities
and were located on the banks of Krishna, Kaveri and
Tungbhadra rivers. Excavations have shown artefacts made of stone, bones, metals,
terracotta etc which determine material culture of this period.
Material culture
Stone and bone tools were found in the form of axes, adzes, borers, pricks etc.
Metal tools like swords, axes made of copper and bronze in phase II
and III were found. Terracotta figurines, pottery with buff ware, red burnished
ware, roughened outer surface in phase II, sprouted and perforated
potteries, wheel turned in later times etc demonstrate the skills of artisan and
craftsmen in these communities. Moreover, some artefacts found had
Subsistence economy
Bones of domesticated and wild animal have been found. Cattle bone more than goats
show that it was an agropastoral community. Forests in
Western Ghats were cleared and shifting cultivation was practiced. Thus human
settlements kept shifting to south with manufacturing new tools.
Human settlements
People lived in houses made of wattle and daub. Burial practices were followed in
similar patterns as earlier cultures. Adults were buried in extended
position, infants in urns in the house. Grave goods were also found. A continuity
with postharappan chalcolithic settlements can be seen in these
communities.
It was a period of continuity in cultures of south India but their origin is still
unknown. Economy gradually developed with the advent of iron technology.
Megalith builders emerged around the end of 2nd millenium B.C. related with the
use of iron. The transition was gradual from chalconeolithic to
iron age and remnants and influences can be clearly seen.They buried dead outside
their home at a distant place with grave goods and a
characteristic stone megalith put in certain patterns. This was a departure from
previous practices where dead were buried inside houses.
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Pottery was blackred ware ironmade axes, swords, sickles, arrows, tridents,
lamps, tripods etc copper and bronze bells for horses, cattle were
found. They were pastoral nomads and used iron to colonize new areas. Remains of
millets, pulses were also found. It reflects their descent from
in the making.
VEDIC PERIOD
Rigveda, the oldest of the 'Vedas' denotes clashes between harappans and Aryans
who migrated from west Asia to Northwest of the Indian
subcontinent. History is proved true if the literary texts are complemented by the
archaeological excavations.
an Aryan pottery was found in areas away from the paths of Aryan migration like
Bhawalpur, Punjab. A break in cultures was depicted in Vedas
with the invasion of Aryans but late Harappan and postHarappan culture (PGW)
appeared in continuity. The bones which were found on the streets
Aryans were not a race but a linguistic group which may have gradually migrated
from west Asia to Europe, India etc.
keeps them healthy and useful for humans. This type of subsistence is called
pastoralism.
Early Vedic people lived in an age where rivers used to shift their courses
frequently. Hence, an area in cultivation or inhabited at one time may be
rituals. Wealth was assessed with the amount of cattle owned. This also led to
cattle raids and fights among groups. Rajas or Gopati owned cows
(gau), gotra for clans in tribes etc derived their names from cows. This reflects
the importance of cows during that period. Moreover, cattle were
E.V society did not have social divisions and was egalitarian. Caste system was
not present. People lived as tribes with clans as units following
was made happy. Education was oral and not well developed. Social differentiation
in the form of priests, Dasas, Panis (who owned alot of cows)
Early Vedic people worshiped forces of nature like water (called as Indra), fire
(called as Agni) etc as Gods and believed in animism. (Soul to natural
forces)They practiced yajna, sacrifices under priestly class for well being of
their clans. Sacrifices were made to incur God's blessings in the form of
wealth and not for spiritual purposes. Religion was still evolving during this
time as certain practices were yet to become rituals. Moreover, priestly
class gained importance due to increased wars between tribals. They prayed to God
to make Rajas win battles and protect their clans.
Iron technology in the later vedic period was used to make weapons as complemented
by excavations. Iron was not used for subsistence in clearing
forests. Forests were burnt for shifting cultivation. Iron was used in chariots
for military activities as war was prevalent between the clans in those
periods.
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Grihapati was the head of the family and the owner of the land. He also carried
out Yajnas to legitimise his authority. He gave gifts to Brahamanas to
gain blessings. People worked to earn wealth. Women were subordinate to men and
were not involved in major decisions. Land ownership became
In L.V phase forms of god changed and were not represented by natural forces on
earth. Indra, Agni etc were replaced by Rudra, Prajapati, Vishnu
etc. Now, gods were prayed to help against foes, for petty causes like killing a
foe, worm in body etc. It arose from the transition of temporary
awarded lands, gifts, cattle they became powerful in the coming years.
between neighbors and different janpadas has been also depicted. Moreover,
Northern Black Polished Pottery was found at different places thus
Gahapati
He was the owner of large pieces of land and households and used slaves captured
in wars to cultivate the fields. This heralded the emrgence of a
Merchants
not distributed among tribesmen. This heralded the emergence of private property
where people also shunned clankin ties or vedic constructs.
Chiefs became kings, peasants, tribes became subordinate to them and paid taxes
for protection from external aggression. Monarchism, hereditary
posts emerged and kshatriyas, brahamans gained precedence over others. Kinship
based rule got replaced by a hereditary ruler subsequently.
As towns, cities developed with a shift from villages, clan based settlements got
diluted. A mix of clans started living together with
Story of Jivaka
Jivaka traveled across the subcontinent to reach Taxila. Roads and settlements
must have been developing around which made his journey
clans or groups. Thus, private property was developing and earnings from trade
supported this development. Indigenous medicine was used to
treat ailing people which shows the knowledge of medicinal plants. Hence, the
mythology of 'Sanjeevani buti in Ramayana' does not look totally false
here. Buddha and Jivaka must have emancipated many and trained more physicians.
Literary vs Archaeology
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Literary texts try to present the then rulers, cities, people as unique and
affluent ones. In a manner they fantasize and exaggerate the facts which
misleads the readers of history. Hence, excavations are carried out horizontally
and vertically to understand the plausibility of these texts. For
example Ayodhya was depicted as a large city but archaeology showed its expanse
quite less than depicted. Similarly, Mahabharat war, Aryan
invasion etc etc too have not been yet supplemented with excavations. Varanasi and
Ayodhya were depicted as cities expanding in 50 or more
square kilometers but on excavation it was not found to be more than five square
kilometers
Urban Areas
Literary texts talked about sprawling cities with fortified settlements. There was
an administrative guidance of king to whom taxes were paid.
Merchants, craftsmen, prostitutes etc lived in the cities. There were places for
travelers to rest and markets to buy different commodities. Women
wore costly jeweleries which shows the wealth of people. However, beggars,
marginalised people doing menial works also lived in the periphery of the
city. Thus, there was varying occupations in the city and rich and poor lived in
the society.
Archaeology demarcates the blurred lines between fantasy and reality. Literary
texts had exaggerated many characteristics of cities. These
cities were not much big and were less developed than Mauryan settlements.
Different potteries and their presence at different places denote
connectivity between settlements. Coins were used instead of barter system. Cities
were mostly built on trade routes and river banks to facilitate
communication and trade. Houses were of mudbricks and not much developed. A
planned settlement as boasted in literary texts were missing
though soaked pits, drainage system were found. Thus urban settlements in 6th
century BC were a preurbanisation phase before Mauryan
empire.
Brahamanas had varying occupations and not necessarily priesthood but they were
referred as Brahmans only. They were tradesmen, hunters,
bathers, wood cutters in different regions. The rigid varna system was not
strictly followed. This may be because of increased prominence of
In Buddhist texts, Kshatriyas have been placed as the superior caste as compared
to Brahamanical texts where Brahmanas are superior.
Kshatriyas were not only warriors but teachers, skilled professionals, Vaidyas
etc. Brahmans were priests and kept themselves to rituals, sacrifices.
With urbanisation, Kings which were called Kshatriyas became prominent and
Brahmans became their advisors or subordinates.
Shudras were the last of the four varnas described in Brahamanical texts. They
comprised of craftsmen, artisans, labourers, dasa, karmakaras etc
who were impoverished and subdued by the higher varnas. It was not a rigid
classification as slaves, war prisoners, menial job workers, people
evicted to forests, people who buried dead etc got included in this fold.
Eventually, after years of suppression and poverty, shudras gave birth to
untouchability
Different marks may be having different values or marks were identification of the
region to which punchmarked coin belonged or they showed the
1.Fertile tracts Magadha was located at middle gangetic valley which was very
fertile and suitable for wetrice cultivation. Eventually paddy
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4.More fieldsWith iron technology wars and conquests increased, more areas were
captured and converted into fields. Rulers conquered lands and
gave it to their folks for cultivation. Many pastorals were also forced to settle
and cultivate in fields.
like jewelery trade, medicine, craftsmanship etc. Land was of paramount value.
Kings donated lands to priests who settled and cultivated lands.
Peasants feeded the nonproducing groups in exchange of money coins. Coins were
of value, acceptable to all and substituted barter system.
The rural economy feeded the urban economy and used the products marketed in
urban areas. It was a system based on internal and external
Spread of Buddhism
1.Rigid brahamanical classes Social inequality made people veer to Buddhism where
everyone was considered equal.
2.Orthodox and obsolete practices As people went out of Varna system, vedic
rituals were of less use to them.
3.Wealthy individuals Brahamans loathed merchants, vaishyas who earned wealth and
setup private property. Buddhism gave them respect and
patronage of these rulers who kept sending people to propagate ideas of Buddha.
5.Language Buddha taught in Pali which was the language of the common man. Whereas
Brahamans preached in Sanskrit, a language restricted to
celibacy which was added by Mahavira. Its other basic ideas for householders are
nonstealing, nonadultery, nonprofession, noninjury and
speaking truth. Hence monks must tread out in daylight. Salvation can only be
attained by ascetism, extreme penance and leaving all the worldly
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pleasures. Every object, living being howsoever small has a soul. One must follow
nonviolence and not kill any of them. Like Buddhism it also
Ajivikas founded by Nanda Vachha were shudra sanyasinis and Gosala propagated it
most efficiently. They rejected the theory of Vedas and
preached in Shravasti, capital of Kosala. They did not believe in Karma and next
birth. Everything is preordained and man can hardly change
The Mauryan emperor Ashoka in dhamma wants people to respect other sects and
teachings as by respecting it you come to respect your
teachings.
condition of the economy during C.Maurya's rule. Inscriptions and Rock edicts of
Ashoka depict his dhamma and the ways he used to make truce
with other kingdoms. Buddhist and Jain texts like Pitakas, Acharangasutra,
Dipavamsa, Mahavamsa tell about Mauryan empire as Ashoka was
rule and Herodotus's account tell a lot about Mauryan empire. Moreover punch
marked coins in circulation during Maurya rule show the
Nanda rule made Magadha empire more stable. It expanded the expanse of empire.
Infact, Alexander did not invade beyond Punjab due to in fearof
to belong to Shudras and led an empire building process for the first time.
the society where peasants, warriors, rulers enjoyed unequal status. The monarch
was the supreme authority with ministers, offcials to levy tax,
administer army etc. It keeps expanding its territory through military prowess
trying to become undisputed leader in the world. But, geographical
Some accounts show that C.G Maurya was of low caste and he was the son of Nanda
ruler and a slave mother. Some refer them as sakyas as
Buddhist texts talk about Moriya clan of Pipphalivana related to buddha. Ashoka
was married to a vaishya girl from Vidisha and CGM had Gupta
in his name which point towards Mauryas as Vaishyas. Moreover, Brahamans referred
to Magadha empire as a mixed culture and dismissed them as
inferior, impure ones. They already considered foreigners from north west making
the society impure. Puranas referred to an era when Shudras
Ashoka conquered Kalinga in a pyrrhic war in around 260 BC. He was deeply aghast
after encountering the human lives lost. This changed his
policy of conquest into a policy of peace and truce between the empires. He veered
towards buddhism and preached Dhamma to his friends and
enemies as well. It is probable that Asoka was already under thoughts of Buddhism
due to his Vaishya relations. He found refuge in Buddhist thoughts
to escape the guilt of killing innocent lives. Also, Ashoka inherited a large
kingdom with a heterogenous population. The need of the hour was
political unification or unity in diversity. Nonviolence and policy of Dhamma
quelled any anger, animosity among people for the state or
themselves.
During Maurya rule, iron technology was used widely. Iron sickles, axes, ploughs
were found in the material remains after excavating Ganges valley.
This led to tilling of loamy soil in the Ganges alongwith clearing of forests.
TAXES
Bhaga Land tax levied on people and collected by state through officials like
Samharta. It was quite high i.e 1/3 of agricultural produce.
Villages had to take care of soldiers passing by which can be aggregated as a tax.
Hiranya was a tax taken in cash
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During emergency or fiscally tough days, state levied Pranaya, a voluntary gift
which was 1/31/4 of produce. It may have turned obligatory in future.
Patliputra was the centre of activity of Mauryan empire and was connected to
different cities in all directions. Towards north, foothills of Himalyas and
Ganges were important trade routes. It extended to Peshawar. Kalinga was the
southeastern trade center from where routes extended to Andhra in
south. Kaushambi, Rajgriha were other important centers. Trade routes extended to
northwest through Ujjain & Taxila which included coastal areas
of Gujarat. It further entered to southern areas. This route was termed as the
Dakshinapatha.
Internal trade blossomed during Maurya rule due to efficient administration, law
and order, better transport facilities.
ministers called mantrins to discuss on specific issues. However, king held the
final authority and his decision was superior to the suggestions made
given separate roles like trade and commerce, law, foreigners care, tax collection
etc. They were allowed to carry discussions and amendments even
in King's absence.
Hence, council of ministers were cog in the wheel of good governance by the kin
was separate official for looking after mining, iron technology, weights and
measures. There was vertical distribution of power in urban areas with
different officials. Rakshi or police was present and they too were under the rule
of law. Citizens and officials were equal in the eyes of law and
and fair play. Mines and their mineral wealth were an important source for taxes.
Other taxes were levied on liquor, 5% of money earned in gambling
medical care, disaster management etc were carried out. Maintenance of army
constituted an important source of expenditure. As large number of
Early years of Mauryan rule were based on expansion and subjugation. Vast areas of
Indian subcontinent were brought under its rule. However,
after Kalinga war Ashoka turned over a new leaf and adopted the policy of peace,
friendliness with all. Foreign powers were sent peace messages
to propagate Dhamma. Egypt, Syria, Cyprus etc had been depicted in Ashokan edicts.
Chola empire in the south was untouched of Mauryan wrath
with whom they maintained friendly relations. Trade and commerce overseas and
internally bolstered the relations between Maurya and its
neighbours.
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victories were substituted by policy of friendly and moral conquest. The same is
needed in present scenario also.
Ashoka inherited a state massive in expanse and diversified in its population. The
motto of dhamma was to consolidate the vast empire and
the pyrrhic victory. He could not tolerate the bloodshed after the war. He
denounced weapons, miltary conquests after this war. Eventually, he
preached dhamma to all his subjects and propagated it to foreign empires. Rock
edict XIII stresses on winning wars not through military conquest
but through winning hearts of the people, adapting to spiritual and moral values
i.e dhamma. In this edict he renounces violence and adopts non
violence.
challenged with the growth of commercial class. New emerging classes wanted
equality in society. This created dissent from the rigid caste system
which had put Vaishyas at a lower level. Hence, Ashoka wanted to silence growing
dissent and promote harmony in the society.
consensus. Moreover force cannot be used always to declare state's supremacy. Tax
collection, law and order maintenance needed participation
from people. A code of conduct acceptable to different sects was the need of the
hour.
Animals were not to be sacrificed, festivals and flaunting of wealth was not
supported. Religious tolerance was propagated among the masses to
way Dhamma was a watershed in administration of monarchs and was not seen again in
future. Many kings have fought wars, conquered
kingdoms, established empires but they were forgotten or not praised in the annals
of history but Ashoka became the king of kings or the beloved of
Mauryan economy was in distress after Ashoka leading to its downfall. A stable
government and well discussed and effective state policies are very
the economy in distress. A famine happened in north Bengal which could be due to
low productivity of agriculture, poor administration in shifting of
surplus produce to starved areas. Mining of iron was also an issue. Poor state
control over vast geographical boundaries may have made extraction
a centralised administration and efficient ruler. Many people refused to pay taxes
to centre and local chiefs furthered their intentions.
Pushyamitra sunga, from Sungas who enjoyed viceroyship of Ujjain came to power in
malwa region. He revived brahmanical practices which were
northwest. Parthians entered India, Kushanas became the most prominent rulers of
the northwest. Satvahans took control over deccan.
suppress these minor groups. Thus, Mauryan rule left the country in a state of
chaos politically though healthy economically .
Sakas displaced Greeks from bactria. They introduced coin system where silver was
minted into coins. Copper inscriptions were prevalent..
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demonstrated the rulers of those times. IndoGreeks were known through their coins
only. Rudradaman, a prominent Saka ruler was known through
Kushanas occupied the area around Indus and northwest of India. Central Asia had
deep impacts not only on their rule but in the shaping of Indian
future.
Silk route passed from these areas. Kushanas levied taxes and allowed safe and
easy passage of goods. Buddhists scholars from China visited
Trade with Romans brought gold in surplus. Gold coins were minted for the first
time by Kushanas. As new ideas came, technological change also
took place.
Buildings were made of burnt bricks. Overall, people had decent living conditions
as supplemented by excavations. Potteries, ornaments too have
Central Asia gave new elements to Indian culture which kept changing and adapting
itself without losing its originality.
TRADE
At the time when Mauryans were at the nadir of their rule, economic prosperity
continued. This led to urbanisation and development of professionals
in the society.
People started doing different works rather than only agriculture. This made the
production of food a domain of a particular class who sold their
Artisans, craftsmen became specialized and started selling overseas. A new class
of Merchants emerged. Wealth was created which opened more
avenues for trade. Entry of foreign rulers opened new routes of trade.
These rulers established trade relations with other empires. Romans demanded
Indian spices, peppers, gems, diamonds, ivory.
Ganas, guilds were formed which kept donating for religious purposes. Banks were
also functioning to keep deposits. Religious propagation
Buddhism developed into different sects with time. Mahayanaism made Buddha a god
who was meant to be worshiped in temples. It believed that
others can also become Buddha by passing stages of Bodhisatvas and performing
paramitas.. Bodhisatvas were considered as monks of merit
developed as centre of Jain inscriptions. Taxila was also a Jain centre. Bharuch
and Sopore in western coast, Madurai in south became important
centres.
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Vaishnavism was a sect of Brahmanism which worshiped Vishnu the protector of the
world. It emerged from Vasudeva cult of vedic times. During
Bhakti movement, animal sacrifices were discarded and full devotion and worship to
God was promoted. This led to complete devotion to three gods
namely Vishnu, Shiva and Brahma. Vishnu is said to have many incarnations called
as Dashavatar. Rama, Balrama, Krishna are the most worshiped
incarnations. Sangam literature has many proses, poems written for Vishnu.
Lakshmi, the consort of Vishnu is revered as the goddess of wealth. The
Karma where one's work is distributed and it is the only path to salvation. Local
traditions were included in worship. Trees, serpents, animals like cow,
horse were worshiped. Bhakti cult saints composed poems, prose in devotion to God.
Art and architecture was quite developed during Mauryan period. Artists sculpted
on polished glass like surface which was different from the earlier
sculptures. Timber was used to construct multi storey buildings at the time of
Chandragupta Maurya. Stupas like at Sanchi, Taxila etc were
constructed without any emphasis on a particular religion but to respect god and
its creation. All these structures had uniquely sculptured symbols,
animals, Jataka stories. Yakshas, Yakshinis were sculpted from stone showing the
beauty of women. Terracota figurines were also prominent in
Stupa was a dome shaped structure built during Mauryan and Post Mauryan times to
preserve the remains of Buddha.
Sanchi stupa was initially constructed by Ashoka during 250 B.C. There are three
stupas but The Great Stupa is magnificent. Its relief shows the four
Structurally it has a Harmika where relics of Buddha were kept in a silver case,
Yasthi a rod at the top of stupa with three umbrella like disc
also sculpted.
Gandhara art was a mixture of Buddhist and Hellenestic art. Early Gandhara art
used blueschist stones for sculptures. Later mud, pilaster,
stucco etc were used. Buddha image had curly hairs, drapery on left shoulder.
Limbs were clearly sculpted with sharp anatomical features. Bronze
Mat village in Mathura. Their dress was also sculpted with boots, swords which
show their valour and origin from central Asia. In Amravati art,
images of Satvahana kings like King Udyana and queen were found.
Satvahana dynasty was dependent on trade and commerce. There was connectivity
between ports and inland centers.
Ports in the western coast like Bharuch were connected by Paithan to Ter which led
to western parts in Andhra. Rivers like Krishna provided
connectivity from west (Kolhapur) to east coast. Another route was from Ujjain to
Maheswar at Narmada connecting Ajanta, Pithalkora,
Tamilham comprised of Kurzirs the village chiefs, Velirs the bigger chiefs and
Vedars the biggest chiefs. They had territories of pastorals, fertile
agricultural lands, dry lands, hilly areas etc. Goods of daily need, food grains
etc were exchanged through barter system.
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However, power of chiefs varied and demand of resources led to clashes frequently.
Weak chiefs were subjugated by powerful chiefs with their
wealth plundered, cattle, grains confiscated. Among the most powerful were the
muvendars namely Cholas, Cheras, Pandyas who ruled in different
areas over the chiefs. Gifts or social service was based on loots which was
distributed among kinship. At times these powerful chieftains or vedars
entered into marriage alliances with less powerful chiefs or velirs. This
maintained healthy relationship between them and support at the time of
major conquests.
These chiefdoms were precursors of a wellestablished state system. Power was yet
to be centralised, bureaucracy was not functional and an
Tinais were ecological zones having different tribes with different occupations.
Kurinji was hilly areas with Kuravar tribes performing slash and burn agriculture.
Mullai was pastoral lands with Ayar tribes, Marutam the fertile land had
agriculturists called uzhavars, Neytal was around seacoast comprising of fishermen,
Paratavars and Pallai the arid zone had robbers belonging to Muavar tribes.
They exchanged their produce with each other thus showing their mutual dependence.
Mullai or pasture lands was used for grazing of cattle which was reared for
milk, wool etc. Shifting cultivation was done to produce millets, lentils, pulses.
They exchanged these with Marutam for rice, paddy etc.
2.Use of bullocks
Wars were fought due to scarcity of resources. Weak chieftains were attacked and
peasants looted. Victorious side used to praise soldiers,
even after redistribution. Resources were also destroyed in the war with peasants
tortured and oppressed. Redistribution of wealth was done among
the warriors, kinsmen, Brahmans. These wars which devastated peasants were
celebrated as heroic acts as shown by Sangam anthologies.
deposits taken for trade. They also managed transport over safe paths with
adequate pricing for the members. Overseas trade was also regulated
Ancient Deccan had Satvahan rule where trade routes were clearly demarcated.
Monastries, caves, restrooms, watersheds were constructed for
boosted and security was provided for safe disposal of goods inland.
Whereas in Tamilhama various tribes ruled and exchanged goods on barter system.
Trade was based on coastal routes with inland waters
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Local coins were either copper, gold or silver. Punchmarked coins of Satavahans,
Kahapanas or silver coins and suvarnas or gold coins of
Kushanas or have been depicted in literature and excavated also. Local chieftains
like Maharatti also issued coins. Moreover, rulers tried to imitate
Roman coins were made up of gold and silver and rarely of copper. They were
used to buy luxury items in India like spices, precious stones,
potteries etc. They were kept safe by Indian rulers as gold had intrinsic value.
It was used as bullion and hoarded also. Some coins were melted
and new coins of rulers were issued. Some were used as ornaments.
Romans lamented for this drain of wealth to India but luxuries of royal and rich
did not diminish.
Traders in Deccan and south India donated money for creation of monasteries and
other religious institutions. Chaityas, Viharas were carved out.
which was liberal in ideas. Whereas in South India donations were not much as
traders, merchants were not wealthy as compared to Deccan
ones.
In Deccan trade and urbanism made the society flexible. Merchants and traders who
were considered Vaishyas gained importance through adopting
Buddhism, Jainism. External trade brought new culture to south India. Traces of
Roman culture can be seen. Old familial ties were broken.
Hereditary basis of occupation was diluted as more options became available like
trading, fishing, carpenter, gold businesses etc. Urbanism led to
flaunting of wealth. Pomp and show became trademark of rich and royals.
Thus, Indian society started reforming at a slow pace but the essence of culture
was maintained.
Sangam Literature
Tamil bardic tradition was based on expressions and stock phrases used to praise
heroes, warriors or kings. Akam or subjective feelings like
love and Puram or objectifying experience like raid, plunder were demonstrated in
Sangam literature.
However, proper dating of these poems are not clear as time of oral composition
and time of coding is different. Still they may belong to 3rd century
GUPTAS
defeated 12 kings in south India but restored them under his rule. As
communication across geographical barriers was an issue it was necessary to
grant them independent rule but under his suzerainity. But, Naga rulers of North
India were similarily defeated and their kingdoms were annexed.
Thus he maintained different policies for kingdoms. Many rulers married off their
daughters to Guptas to prevent annexation of their kingdoms.
However, every kingdom under his empire owed allegiance to his rule.
His kingdom expanded from Bengal in the east to Gujarat in the west. He brought an
end to Saka rule by defeating Rudrasimha II. His inscription
tell about his expedition to Bactria conquering Vahilkas. Vakatakas and some Naga
rulers were in matrimonial alliances with him. He defeated rulers
According to his inscriptions CII wanted to conquer the whole of earth which may
be an exaggeration but it does not deny the imperial nature of
Gupta empire.
One who goes up must come down. The downfall of any empire is related to acumen of
rulers and the state of empire inherited by them.
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Guptas followed Samanta system where rulers of South India were independent to
rule after accepting suzerainty of Gupta king. At times of political
tensions like heir to throne etc, these rulers tried to detach themselves from
Guptas. After Skandgupta, Guptas unfortunately could not have any able
Moreover, there was a tradition of donating lands to brahmanas. This could have
made them powerful and rich enough which eventually led to
The imperial nature of this empire made military expenditure very high. This again
put a burden to state's wealth. Even then with invasion of
foreign powers like Hunas made them too weak to rule and administer the vast
kingdom.
Their disintegration was inevitable with the end of rule of efficient kings like
CG, SG,CG2,KG,SkG and the absence of any strong shoulders after
them.
Officials
MahanandanayakaChief Justice
VishyapatiIncharge of districts
AshvapatiHead of Horses
PilupatiHead of Elephants
NarapatiHead of soldiers
Pustapalarecord keeper
A king should keep a record of land revenue and other sources of income as the
wealth of treasury represents the wealth of Kingdom.
The King had right to levy taxes for maintaining the empire. One sixth of produce
was royal revenue. Taxes were charged on interprovinces trade
called Uparikara. Commercial tax was called sulka. Bali, visthi was taxed on
labour. There was an officer called Gopasramin or Asthapaladikrita
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different from the ideal manner as depicted. In reality there was a mix of varnas
due to intermarriages, foreign migrants etc. Brahamans tried to give
They attained the highest and purest category. Even kings practising Buddhism,
Jainism respected them. Eventually, other castes were declared sub
ordinate to them. People were declared untouchables based on their occupation like
craftsmen, scavengers, butchers etc. Their presence was also
debarred and were considered only for menial works. Women too were subordinated
even if they belonged to upper castes. Most of the upper
castes women had little freedom. Even, some Brahamanical texts refer them as
Shudras.
PostGuptas
Gaudas in Bengal
Harsha gained power at the time when Pushyabhuti king Rajyavardhana was killed
through treachery by Sasanka, Gauda king and Gurjaras in
alliance. He defeated Sasanka with the help of Vallabhis with whom he entered into
marriage alliances. Gurjaras were also hostile to him. They had
accepted suzerainty of Pulakeshin II, the famous Chalukya king of Badami who
defeated Harshvardhana subsequently. Harsha had friendly relations
with chinese emperor of Tang dynasty. Chinese sent three ambassadorsto his court.
Hieuntsang was the most prominent one who has written alot
about harsha. Wangsei was the last to come but Harsha died before he reached him.
In the eastern side Harsha was in friendly relations with
PostHarsha political conditions did not go into disarray as Many regional kingdoms
consolidated power. Bhaskarvarman in his Nidhipur inscription,
Adityasena, the Later Gupta king in his Apsod inscription are known. In Kashmir,
karakotas established power and went in marriage alliance with
and were comparitively wealthy. Pallavas had to fight with Chalukyas and Pandyas
at the same time. Pandyas ruled over less fertile region of river
Vaigai and looked towards Pallavas as a source of treasure. Pallavas led naval
expeditions to Sri Lanka, South east Asia and established their
supremacy. Vishnu temple, tanks at Thailand reflect Pallavas hold over those
areas.
South India has varied geographical barriers with river basins of Krishna, Kaveri,
Godaveri separated by rugged mountains. Hence, it was difficult
for a single kingdom to rule over the entire mainland. This led to consistent
political disunity among the kingdoms. Minor chieftains kept
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supporting these rulers for there own survival. Their power in consolidation with
the major kingdoms of Pallavas, Chalukyas, Pandyas was
Any big kingdom only survives with the help of minor feudatory which kept in check
the growth of other hostile kingdoms.
which had representation of people themselves solved their problems. There were ur
an aseembly of nonbrahamans, sabha an assembly of Brahamanas and
Minor chieftains had an on and off relationship with big kingdoms. Pallavas were
given the highest ritual status and all minor kings showed their
allegiance to Pallavan king. Brahmans had stronghold that time and Pallavan Kings
donated lands and wealth in respect to them. Hence Pallava kings
could have been awarded the highest position in society by the priests.
However, this theory had not been supported as these minor chiefs broke ties
during political turmoil or shifted to Chalukyas for petty gains.
These kings may had a feudal relationship with Pallavas and Chalukyas and tried to
become independent when the central power weakened at times
Coins of gold, silver, copper are rare in postGupta period. Trade with Romans
declined as no roman coins are found. Moreover, Roman empire
The relationship was not cozy with Arabs, Persians who came to rule the trade
route after Romans. This further declined trade. The Byzantine
empire traded for silk and spices from India. They too in 6th century gained the
knowledge to grow silk worm. This affected the silk trade badly.
Overseas trade with southeast Asia also declined as no pottery, crafts are seen of
those periods. Internal trade declined around coastal areas,
between cities and villages etc. Merchants wealth degraded and trade suffered a
setback.
used as manure as written in Harsh Charita. Plants and animal diseases were
managed well.
Land grants became a norm by kings, rulers, merchants to religious institutions,
individuals. Moreover, soldiers, officials were granted land and its
cultivators. There came to lie middlemen between revenue collection and crop
production. Ultimately the peasant suffered and was reduced to a
This resulted in feudal system where landlords and peasants came to light. The
coming world was to be based on this principle only.
Economy moved from urban to rural in postGupta period. Brahmans had increasing
clout as agricultural surplus profited them a lot. A need for
holding land, revenue records arose. This led to creation of a recordkeeping class
called kayasths (also called Karanika, Pushtpala, chitragupta,
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Vaishyas were merchant class who benefited from trade. But trade declined with
rural economy which caused migration of Vaishyas to villages and
further decrease in wealth. On the other hand, Shudras gained landholdings and
benefited from agriculture. The socioeconomic gap started
diminishing but Vaishyas remained economically weak. Many lower end Vaishyas were
transformed into Shudras.
distinction between shudras and vaishyas got blurred. (Alberuni in his writings
have put shudras and vaishyas together as a class).
As economy grew, sophistication, luxury grew along with rapid increase in
population. The need for lower menial jobs was felt, even agriculture
demanded more labors. This caused inclusion of tribes in the society who were
given the lowest grade in society of untouchables.
The whole society got divided on the basis of caste and became rigid in marriage,
company etc. The rural India had enclosed homes for separate
classes. Sadly, this division is still prevalent in India even after social
consolidation and reforms taken during preindependent and postindependent
India.
limited to earlier classes only. Infact, society became more rigid seeing these
changes where every class tried to preserve their originality.
This phase was a decline in the position of women. Women were given low social
status along with Shudras according to Brihat Samhita. They
were not given share in landholdings of parents. SatiPratha was prevalent in upper
castes which further demoralised women. After marriage,
Brahmans became the centre of authority as land grants made them rich and
powerful. Different groups arose from them with differences in work.
Some became landlords, some remained priests, some were peasants etc. Many
migrated to different areas and created new castes among the
local people.
With improved agriculture, there was a demand of labour. New classes were formed
from tribes. They were given the status of Shudras. Shudras
Untouchables were the important source of labor. They were expanded with inclusion
of tribes.
Kayasths emerged as a new community and attained the status of Jati. Similarly,
blacksmiths, weavers, goldsmiths formed jatis and became rigid in
marriages etc. Guilds too developed into castes as trade degraded during this
period. Everyone tried to preserve their culture though there was
governors also for different areas but there was a code of conduct for all. Dhamma
was to be followed and every area was subordinate to the king.
autonomously. Moreover, land grants were given to religious figures who were
exempted from taxes and centre's interference. This made these
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donees powerful enough to rule on the local population. There were Uparikas at
Bhuktis, Vishyapatis at districts. Their salary was awarded in the form
of lands with revenue rights to them. These posts over the time became hereditary
thus decreasing the power of king.
Samantas were feudal chiefs who were conquered but given autonomy to rule by the
major power. These samantas tried to become independent from the centre
always. A feature of decentralised polity emerged when people were granted lands.
These people were responsible for administration of those areas and had
immunity from army. They carried taxation of peasants, land and referred
themselves as Mahasamntas, Panchamasabdas etc to proclaim their autonomy.
Kings used religious rituals to legitimise their rule. Moreover, it was a period
of growth of religious cults like Vaishnavism and Shaivism. Brahmans
and these Bhakti saints were taken in high regards by these rulers. They were
donated lands, temples were constructed for them. Tirthas emerged
which became centres of pilgrimage for people. Kings supported people in their
religious ideas and became patrons of monks, priests etc. There
In North India Brahmanism was based on Varna system or caste based society. All
the sections of society were not included as untouchables,
Bhakti movement diluted the divisions in the society with inclusion of all castes,
women in the society. They also shifted to Vishnu and Shiva as their
deities. Moreover there hymns, songs were in the local languages like Tamil as
compared to Sanskrit of Brahmans. Thus they were widely
accepted.
Ultimately Brahmans related these gods to Vedic and local cult gods like Indra,
Varun etc and gave supremacy to a monotheistic god. This
brought Bhakti saints also in fold. Eventually, Alvars and Nayanars disappeared
and were referred compositely as Brahmans, Acharyas etc
belonging to the higher castes of Vellalas. The origin of present day Hinduism
dates to these processes only.
My view point
Why did peple shift from Vedic gods to other less important gods of that time? Why
were tribal rituals, gods also incorporated?
The basic region could be similarities between all of them and their growth as
branches of Hinduism.
Imagine a place had drought for a year due to poor rainfall. As science was not
developed like today people must have considered this an act of God.
Now consider a same area where enough rainfall took place, agricultural produce
was marvelous at the same time. Here people would thank god for
his blessings.
There were differences in the name of gods being worshiped by the two communities.
So, people may have shifted their Bhakti to those gods whose
worship gave profits even though the real reason was geography. Thus Gods came and
went with time. With the advent of modern science we know
the real reason behind such difference as rainfall (El Nino), soil types,
agricultural expertise etc. But these Gods are our heritage and it is tough to
Moreover, humans have fear for something always and Gods were created to give
support and rescue.
Tantricism involved religious rituals followed by nonAryan tribes which were later
adopted by the civilised cults. It focused on matsya or fish,
mamasa or meat, madya or alcohol, maithuna or sex and mudra or physical gestures.
In Tantricism the focus has been on three things namely,
status of women, sexual rituals and female deities. Women were considered superior
in contrast to the inferior position given by Brahmans.
Tantric priests followed sexoyogic practices to cure illness. They claimed to cure
snake bite, diseases by their magical powers. Image worship, tantric
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cults, worship of tribal gods like Matangi, Candali equivalent to Kali, Parvati of
Hinduism. These gods were also absorbed into the mainstream
Hinduism.
Nalanda
It was devoted to Buddhist studies, but it also trained students in fine arts,
medicine, mathematics, astronomy, politics and the art of war.
It also had a library and dormitories for students, and accommodations for
professors. It housed nearly 10, 000 students and 2000
professors.
Students from Japan, China, Korea, Tibet, Indonesia, Persia and Turkey came here
to learn.
Buddha often visited this site . Sariputra and Moggallana, two of Budhhas
disciples, are from this area. A tomb named after Sariputra is found
Many monks lived here and studied. Famous among them was Naropa. He was
instrumental in bringing Buddhism to Tibet along with
Hsuan Tsang, the famous Buddhist pilgrim from China, came here and taught for
five years in 7 th A.D.
Takshashila
Generally, students entered Takshashila at the age of sixteen. The Vedas and the
eighteen arts, which included skills such as archery, hunting
and elephant lore, were taught, in addition to its law school, medical school, and
school of military science.
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ART&CULTURE
http://www.frontline.in/artsandculture/heritage/giftsfromthechalukyas/article823226
6.ece?homepage=true
To comprehend the present and move towards the future requires an understanding
of the past that is sensitive, analytical and open to enquiry.
'ROMILA THAPAR'
What makes the Shompens distinct from the four other PVTGs (Particularly
Vulnerable Tribal Groups) of Andaman and Nicobar Islands
Jarawas, Great Andamanese, Onges and Sentinelese is that they are only tribe in
the region with Mongoloid features. The others have Negroid
features
Ujjain is among the four cities where the Maha Kumbh is celebrated every 12 years,
drawing millions of pilgrims for a holy dip. The other three are
cultural relations, through cultural exchange with other countries and their
peoples. It was founded on 9 April 1950 by Maulana Abul Kalam
The Council addresses its mandate of cultural diplomacy through a broad range of
activities. In addition to organising cultural festivals in India
photography, theatre, and the visual arts. It also administers the Jawaharlal
Nehru Award for International Understanding established by the
Pichhwai are intricate paintings which portray Lord Krishna. They exist in the
holy town of Nathdwara in the Rajasthan state of India.
Krishna is shown in different moods, body postures, and attire more commonly found
on a cloth or paper. It is a very ancient form of art passed on
from generation to generation and it has a very devotional theme towards Lord
Krishna.
every year. Sabarimala is believed to be the place where the Hindu god Ayyappan
meditated after killing the powerful demoness Mahishi.
Women of 1050 years not allowed entry as Ayyapa was an austere celibate sage.
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Chola era Ganpathi idols stolen from India and found in USA
Kondane
Barasingha and Hunter with an arrow and 40 other paintings a chaitya hall with
Stupa at one end Hinayana Buddhism
Malegaon Jatra or yatra
Mahh Bihu
Whole night spent singing and fishing and living in temporary shelters made of
straw called mejis
etc.
3.Charaka
Charaksamhita book was written by him , vastly taken as base for Indian Medicine
even today.
4. Habba Khatun Poetess and ascetic, who is also known as 'Nightingale of
Kashmir',
Since 1982, International Dance Day or World Dance Day, is celebrated on April 29.
This is the day to rejoice the exuberance of the spirit and
all that is vibrant. The International Dance Committee of the UNESCO International
Theatre Institute, started this initiative in 1982 to commemorate
the art of dance. The International Dance Council (CID), a partner NGO of UNESCO
works towards the objective to increase awareness and the
importance of dance among the masses. It also aims to persuade governments all
over the world to include dance in education. Every year on
Dance Day, the CID President sends an official message to every country around the
globe.
Wangla festival
Kadapa
Gandikota fort
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Triplicane
Alamgirpur
roof tiles, dishes, terracota cakes, figurines, humped buil and snake
Kankapuripatnam
Vadnagar
capital of Gujarat during ancient times
Adurru
2400 year old Buddhist site on western bank of the Vainetaya in east Godavari
district.
Ayurveda
Ayurvedic physicians believe that there are three doshas or biological energies /
humors found in the human body.
Ancient Indians believed that everything that we see is made up of five elements
Space, Air, Fire, Water and Earth.
Each individual would have different levels of these three doshas, hence the
diversity. However, each person can be classified, belonging to one
Meghalaya
Excavations at Hampi
Soopsashtra
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But destruction of cultural sites by ISIS have not stopped. Palmyra known as Pearl
of the Desert
Thatheras
1.Nagaland people celebrate this large festival and the centre supports its
organisation.
2.Organised by Department of State tourism art & culture at Naga heritage village,
Kashima, Nagaland.
Lingayats/Virashivas
worship Shiva
Belief that on death people reunite with Shiva. So they bury their dead to
prevent rebirth.
Organised by NSD
Project Mausam
Launched in 30th session of World Heritage Committee in Doha, Quatar, July 2014
To revive historical maritime, cultural and economic ties with 39 Indian ocean
countries namely Egypt, China etc
Handloom
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Targeting only a niche group like the affluent class as handlooms are costlier.
Under Essential Commodities act and Hank Yarn obligation spinning mills have to
produce yarn called Hank Yarn for handloom.
Powerloom taken livelihood of many moreover power woes many left in a lurch
Powerloom and Handloom should not compete with each other complement and
supplement each other
Poor credit availability, less educated and less resourceful
Waiving of loans changing the notion that it is for less educated to a profession
with good remuneration attracting youth
intervention or human energy for production called Hybrid looms but government
retained handloom as any loom other than powerloom
But health issues like soreness in palm, hands, legs, chronic nervous disruption
need a little bit mechanisation. Hence semiautomatic handlooms
can be an option
MNREGA sector linkage dresses for government schools, offices, police etc
Varanasi has now climbed the bandwagon of UNESCO "Cities of Music" under the
Creative Cities Network. Nine cities Glasgow (Scotland),
Performing arts
Rich cultural heritage of the nation in music, drama, painting, dances etc
>
i i
Bhimbetka, M.P
Reached its zenith during Gupta period (Samudragupta), Delhi sultanate, Mughal
rule etc
Folk music and dances during harvesting season, birth of child, marriages etc to
celebrate personally or in groups with the local
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people.
Entire Himalyan region celebrate sowing of wheat crop from Darjeeling to Kashmir.
Clowns crack jokes and reflect the socioeconomic problems in the society. Ina very
simple manner, artists perform with the narrator using high pitch
dialogues.
r
Kanpur, Lucknow, Haathras
Bhavai of Gujarat
Tamasha of Maharashtra
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Matsya (fish), Kurma (tortoise), Varaha (boar), Narsimha (lionman), Vaman (dwarf),
Parashuram, Rama, Krishna (or Balram),
Krisnattam of Kerala
Mudiyettu of Kerala
Koodiyattam of Kerala
Jatra of Bengal
Fairs in honour of Gods, religious rituals
Bhaona of Assam
Yakshgana of Karnataka
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n I r
s
I '
Based on stories of Mahabharata i.e Draupadi swaymbar etc and Ramayana stories
like Rajyaabhishek.
Theyyam of Kerala
Bhand Pather
Farming community of Kashmir perform music, dance and acting. Satire, wit and
parody creates laughter. Dhol, surnai, nagara
are used and farmers show their way of living, ideas which are discernible.
Kalhana's 'Rajtaringini' talks about Bhand Pather
Swang
Two forms in Rohtak where Haryanvi is used and Haathras where Brij Bhasa.
Rasleela
Martial arts
Kalariapayattu of Kerala
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Lazim of Maharashtra
Canons of classical dance laid down in Bharata's NATYASASHTRA (between 2th century
B.C to A.D, revealed by creator Brahma), Matanga's
Brihadessika (dealt with ragas, desi music, 46th century A.D), Sangeet Sudhakara
of Haripala, Swaramelakalanidhi of Mahamatya
. 3
Z X
All India Radio (AIR) was going to launch a 24hour classical music channel,
Raagam, on various digital platforms this Republic Day.
HINDUSTANI
Natyasashtra
Shadja Grama
Madhyam Grama
#Both differed with one sruti in their panchama (Svar, notes) i.e M.G panchama was
one sruti lower than S.G panchama
Melodic forms called Jatis with Graha (starting note) and Nyasa (note ending
phrase)
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Replaced by Sa Re Ga Ma Pa Dha Ni
Sa re re ga ga ma ma pa dha dha ni ni
Talas
108 talas
Theka defines tala by a stroke of tabla (each stroke defines a bol, syllable)
Musical forms
Nibaddha SangeetPrabhanda Giti the generic term for nibaddhas with a set of ragas
and talas
Bhakti movement
Nanak, Kabir, Jaideva, Chaitnya, Surdas, Tulsi, Eknath, Tukaram, Mirabai, Narsi
DHRUPAD
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Khyal
Propagated by Amir khushrau (13th century), Sultan Mohammad Sarkhi 15th century,
Niyamat khan Sadarang and
Two forms
Both have asthayee (middle and lower octaves) and antara (upper and middle
octaves)
GWALIOR Gharana
Father Nathan Peerbaksh
Open voice clear enunciation of words with stress on swaras, raga, talas
AGRA Gharana
insistence on tala
Musicians Mallikarjun Mansur, Kishori Amonkar
Rampur, U.P
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Thumri
CARNATIC MUSIC
Tolkappiyam, Kalladam by Vaishnavite and shaivite saints during 78th century A.D
With advent of Muslims, Hindustani music got affected by Arabic and Persian styles
and became phenomenal in Mughal courts.
Whereas, carnatic music developed under original lines and got patronage of
Krishandeva Arya of Vijaynagara kingdom.
South Indian music was prevalent in the reign of Yadavas in middle ages at their
capital Deogiri.
Svaravalis, Janta varisas, Suladi sapta, tala alankars and gitams are master
pieces.
Devaranamas or Dasar Padas were kirtans of Purandardasa
Haydn.
Few musicians were Vina Kuppayar, Patnam Subramanyam Iyer, Ramand Srinivas
Iyengar, Mysore Sadsiva Ro,
Many musicians had knowledge of Hindustani music and adopted raga to carnatic
compositions.
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Many musics have similarities with Hindustani music like Raga Kaphi, kanad,
Khamaj, Paraj, Purvi, Bhairav
Musical trinity too adopted ragas like Yaman Kalyan, Hamir Kalyan etc
Ancient prabhandhas gave way to different music. Some musical forms are:
GITAM
Gitalankars like a iya, a iyam, va iya etc are special features called matrik
padas.
Purandardasa wrote gitas for Vishnu, Maheswara, Ganesha called Pillari Gitas.
Devotional, contain fewer sahitya syllables than gitam, more vowel extensions.
SVARJATI
More complicated than gitams and learnt after gitams gives way to Varnams.
Based on dance form with Jatis or talas, solfa like tak tari kita..
JATISVARAM
Similar to svarjati
Pallavi, Anupallavi sung with jatis, Charnam with svaras and jatis.
Ragamalika Jatisvaram
VARNAMS
Pure in character which makes vocalist and instrument player master in this art
and gain command over raga, tala, bhava
Two types
Tana Varnam Music based Words only for Pallavi, Anupallavi, Charnam
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KIRTANAM
KIRTI
PADA
JAVALI
TILLANA
PALALVI
TANAM
Delphic Games
1000 years old games of Greece
6 categories: musical arts and sounds/ performing arts/ language arts/visual arts/
social arts/ ecological arts and architecture.
SATRAS
1596). The entire gamut of religious, social and cultural activism in medieval
Assam of the 15th17th century centred on the Satra, with the naam
ghar or kirtanghar as its nucleus. Six centuries later, the Satras, spread across
Assam, continue to be at the heart of Assamese culture, including
http://indianexpress.com/article/explained/satrasinrownowcentreofassamlifeforcentur
ies/
There are nearly 900 of them today, and the most important Satras are at Majuli
island in the Brahmaputra, and in Barpeta, Nagaon
and Dhubri. Satriya dance is performed by Bhakats who have won Sangeet Natak
Academy award.
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NCERT/ Others
Resources
Potential Resources
Developed Resources
Stocks
In abundance
Reserves
In abundance
Not in use at present but future use on technology.
Resource Planning
India has vast reserves of minerals, energy sources etc. But these are scattered
over the whole subcontinent. Rajasthan has solar energy but less
water, Leh has mineral resources but less water etc. Some states are rich in one
but deficient in another. Each can supply each other to meet
1.Identification
2.Planning
3.Matching
Issues
resources are more prosperous than these states. Hence development depends not
only on availability of resources but on
Technology
IOD is positive when western Indian ocean is more warm than eastern Indian ocean.
It helps SW monsoon gain moisture pushing it towards India.
El Nino is abnormal rise in temperature of equatorial Pacific off the coast of
South America. It affects rainfall in India, winter in eastern Australia
It counters El Nino as western waters are made more warmer than eastern thus
bringing more rainfall to western coast of India
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Earthquake
EARTH
Pluto has been declared a dwarf planet located in the Kupier belt (A belt
containing ice masses revolving around sun).
Ceres is the largest asteroid. Dawn of NASA will reach Ceres in 2015. It will give
initials about beginnings of solar system.
Moon has revolving period of 27 days and the same time as rotating spin. It is
located 3,84,000 Km from earth.
That is why we are able to see only one side of the moon.
Pole star indicating north direction is also called as 'North Star'. By measuring
the angle of Pole star gives the latitude of that
place.
When Prime Meridian 0 degrees will have sun at overhead or the highest point of
sky then all places will have the same on the 0
degrees longitude.
India has local time adopted to central meridian 82*30' E passing at Mirzapur near
Allahabad.
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earth plane
s orbital
a V A
Qce..
23
Ben 51
>
Spring
Np. Equinox
(21 March)
Autumn
Winter in the
Summer in the
A ..
Domains of Earth
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Asia
In eastern hemisphere
China is leading producer of Rare Earth Metals (17 elements including Lanthanides
and yttrium, scandium), lead, antimony, tungsten
Health care
MRIs, cochlear impalnts, Ytrium in solid state lasers and cancer treatment
Clean Energy
Electronics
Transportation
Electric motors, Hybrid cars, catalytic converters
Africa
South America
Australia
Island continent
Antarctica
Strait
A narrow passage of water connecting two large water bodies like sea and ocean or
seas.
Isthmus
HYDROSPHERE
Ocean water movements are the waves, the tides, the oceanic currents.
97% water in oceans is salty, 2.5% fresh water, 70% of fresh water is in glaciers
Mariana trench in Pacific ocean is deepest (11,022 Km)
Atlantic Ocean is S shaped, coastline is highly indented which is good for ports.
It is busiest ocean in terms of commerce.
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ATMOSPHERE
Density decreases with height. Sea level densest and above density decreases.
Mountain climbers feel oxygen crunch due to low
density of air.
BIOSPHERE
Narrow zone of contact between land, water, air where life exists.
LANDFORMS
Mountain is a hill which is more than 600 metres in 'elevation' above the sea
level.
Fold mountains
Formed due to tectonic process of collision of plates. Himalayas, Alps are the
young mountains. Aravali, Applachians, Ural mountains
are old.
Keeps getting weathered by erosion.
Block Mountains
Volcano mountains
Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, Africa, Mt. Fujiyama in Japan, Mt. Shindake in Japan,
Mt. Calbuco in Chile.
Mauna Kea (10,205 metres) which is underwater in Hawaii higher than everest
PLATEAU
Deccan Plateau in India, East African Plateau in Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Western
plateau of Australia, Tibet Plateau the highest
called as 'Roof of the World' is 4,0006,000 metres above the sea level.
Rich in mineral deposits. Afrcan plateau for gold and diamond, India's
Cjhotanagpur plateau for iron, coal, manganese.
Lava plateaus are rich in black soil which is fertile and good for cultivation.
PLAINS
MAPS
Globe studies earth as a whole. Map is specific and more detailed if we need to
know about cities, countries, physical features.
Physical Map
Political Map
Thematic Map
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Brown for mountains, yellow for plateau, green for plains, blue
for water bodies.
Sketch
Plan
Detailed map showing small area on a large scale with length and breadth of
housing, sanitation projects.
INDIA
m N
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(continental sn f |
Internationai waters
Contiguous zone
( 12 nautical miles)
Territorial waters
( 12 nautical miles)
Internal waters 7
Baseline
Land
Time of Standard Meridian 82 30'E passing from Mirzapur in Uttar Pradesh is the
standard time.
UN Convention on Law of the Seas
Member countries have the right to exploit 370 km of their continental shelves
Latitudinal extent influences the duration of day and night as one moves from
south to north
That is why differences between duration of day and night is hardly felt at
Kanyakumari which is 8 degrees north of equator.
Movement of these plates causes stress leading to volcanic, folding and faulting
activity.
Convergent Boundary
Two plates come towards each other which slide against each other or come below
another.
Divergent Boundary
Transform Boundary
Gondwana Island
PROCESS
Continental Drift Theory by Alfred Wenger, 1912
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2.Sedimentary rocks termed 'Tethys' got accumulated in the geosyncline and folded
to form mountains of Western Asia and Himalayas.
3.It led to depression in northern flank of Peninsular plateau which got filled by
silt and rivers started flowing there forming the northern plains.
Land Utilisation
It depends on :
Topography Population
Climate Technology
ft.
General land use Categories 1960- 61 General land use Categories 2002 03
12.01%
h- 6 29%
4.71% A s 3.45%
^ N
1.50 %
^ 1.10
<H 4 41%
Forest
Area mLsc
Culturable Wasteland is land which has not been cultivated for more than 5
agricultural years.
Current fallow is land left uncultivated for 1 or less than 1 agricultural year.
Other than current fallow is land left uncultivated for 15 agricultural years.
Area sown more than once in an agricultural year plus net sown area is called
Gross Cropped Area.
Other than current fallow lands are poor in quality and cost of cultivation is
high leading to once or twice cultivation in 23 years. If it is included in Net
Forest cover in India includes forests occurring naturally and areas demarcated
for forests like plantations, regenerating lands etc. Hence figures may
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Total area under forest is 697,898 sq km. or 21.23% of total geographical area.
If patches of forest land left for regeneration is counted then it becomes 24%.
Land Degradation
Wastelands include arid, rocky, desert areas and land put to nonagricultural uses
like roads, railways, settlements etc. Overuse of land by
HIMALAYAS
Run from west to east for 2400 km with width of 400 km in North to 150 km in
northeast.
1.Punjab Himalayas
2.Kumaon Himalayas
3.Nepal Himalayas
4.Assam Himalayas
Regional Names
Punjab Plains
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Ganga Plains
Bhabbar
Terai
South of Bhabbar streams reemerge and create wet, swampy and marshy region.
Forests & wildlife present but were cleared after independence for settlements.
Bhangar
Khadar
150mm rainfall
Thar desert has clear skies all the time. Sands do not absorb and reflect all the
heat this results in high temperatures in the day
PENINSULAR PLATEAU
Central Highlands
Deccan Plateau
South of Narmada
Western ghats is higher and narrower than eastern Ghats. Its height increases
towards south.
WG can be passed through passes only namely Pal ghats, Thal, Bhor Ghats
Black soil area or Deccan Trap is present. It is of volcanic origin and formed of
igneous rocks.
Aravali hills in western and northwestern margins as eroded and broken hills
running southwest to northeast direction
Ponmudi is a hill station near Thiruvananthpuram, Kerala known for Dental tourism
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COASTAL PLAINS
West coast
East coast
Chilika Lake, the largest salt water lake in Odisha in Mahanadi delta.
Earlier Lakshadweep was Minnicoy, Laccadive and Amindive and named in 1973 as
Lakshadweep
Corals in Lakshdweep
In problem due to
1.Pollution by Ships
2.Global warming
3.Reclamation
Barrier reef
Fringing Reef
Atolls
CLIMATE
It is affected by location, altitude, pressure & wind system, distance from the
sea, ocean currents and relief features.
Average weather pattern taken over along time, say 25 years is climate of that
place.
Distance from the sea is called continentality i.e very hot during summers and
cold during winters.
1.Latitude
2.Altitude
Himalayas in the north with more than 6000 metres height prevent cold winds in
Central Asia from entering India. This makes winter milder in India as
Coriolis force pushes them to right and towards India but with little moisture.
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& o i r
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t i s h s
8 i 3 o t s
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1 y
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*For winter monsoon, westerlies flow south of its normal position in 3060 degrees
over the Indian landmass but it remains north of Indian landmass
*Jet streams flow 512 km north of Indian landmass but have moved south to
foothills of Himalayas
Dry and less cold winters controlled fungal diseases of rabi crops which grow in
humid and cold environment in winters however rabi crop yield
MidNovember to February with January and February being the coldest months.
Western cyclonic disturbances bring rainfall called 'mahawat' which is much needed
for Rabi crops.
Tamil Nadu which receives less rainfall being parallel to BoB branch of SW
monsoon.
2.Hot Weather season(summer)
March to May
Low pressure develops from Patna to Thar desert which beckons monsoon in future.
'Loo' a westerly wind blows from northwest and Pakistan region. These heat waves
cause heat shocks to people.
Dust storms are common in northern India. They cause little rainfall and make
weather cold.
Kal Baisakhi or Nowesters occur in West Bengal and Assam are thunderstorms with
violent winds, torrential downpours with hail
Mango showers or premonsoon showers occur in Kerala and Karnataka which help in
ripening of mangoes.
June to September
Duration is 100120 days with variability and different parts receive rainfall at
different times.
Burst of Monsoon occurs when there is continuous rainfall in heavy and slow form
for a few days.
Progress of Monsoon
1.Monsoons reach the southern tip of Indian peninsula by first week of June.
2.It gets divided into two parts namely Arabian sea branch and Bay of Bengal
branch
3.Arabian sea branch causes rainfall in Maharashtra starting from Mumbai which
receives heavy rainfall.
4.As western ghats are mountainous in nature, windward side receives heavy
rainfall but leeward side or Vidarbha part of
rainfall.
6.Bay of Bengal branch enters Assam and strikes with lofty mountains of Garo,
Khasi, Jaintia hills and causes immense rainfall in these
7.Now BoB branch goes towards Bihar, Bengal, Odisha and causes rainfall over these
areas. Rainfall decreases east to west.
8.It reaches Delhi around 30th June but causes less rainfall as compared to other
areas as most of the moisture is lost in Eastern
India.
8.Now BoB and Arabian sea branch meets near Ganga plains. LehLadakh, cold desert
receives little rainfall.
10.Islands receive rainfall from the last week of April to first week of May.
11.T.N, A.P receive less rainfall as they lie parallel to BoB branch. Moreover
they lie on the leeward side of the mountains.
12.Breaks in rainfall
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Low pressure weakens and gradually replaced by High pressure with apparent
movement of sun. ITCZ also shifts southwards.
October Heat High temperatures and humidity as days are hot but land is still
moist.
Northeast monsoon causes rainfall in Tamil Nadu, A.P (Winds blow land to sea)
Easterly jet streams bring cyclonic disturbances causing havoc in eastern coast.
Intensity of cyclones increase northwards towards
Odisha, Andhra Pradesh. Deltas of Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri are always affected
with these cyclones.
Agriculture, festivals, culture of India and its people are related with monsoons.
Northern region is affected at mass with monsoons thus creating
VEGETATION
When grasses, shrubs, trees grow on their own without human interference for along
time then it is called natural vegetation (Virgin vegetation). It
World's Conservation Union's Red List named 352 medicinal plants with 52
critically threatened and 49 endangered.
Neem, Tulsi,
This is because Himalayas have eastwest alignment and slope facing south receives
more rainfall and sunlight.
Toucan have large, long beak to reach fruits on branches which are too weak to
support its weight)
Moist deciduous
200100 cm rainfall
Dry deciduous
Rainfall of 10070 cm
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Animals in these forests are Tigers, Langoors, Elephants, Lions, Monkeys etc
Higher latitudes
Animals like Deer, foxes, wolves and birds like pheasnats, monals
Mediterranean Vegetation
West and south west margin of continents, around Mediterranean sea in Europe,
Africa, Asia
California, south west Africa, south western South America & South west Australia.
Thorny Bushes
Leaves are reduced to spines to conserve water, succulent stems, sunken stomata,
deep tap roots
West Bengal, A&N islands, Deltas of Ganga, Mahanadi, krishna, Godavari, Kaveri
Silver fir, Pine, Birches, junipers but get stunted near snowline
Alpine grasslands
Silver fox, mink, polar bear, Kashmir stag, spotted dear, Ibex, Red Panda, goats
with thick hair.
Sholas are temperate forests found in Nilgiri, Anamalai and Palani hills.
Tropical Grasslands
Temperate Grasslands
Prairies
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i k
A SEA ^ GREENLAND
MY
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AMr ^
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Moderate rainfall 50 cm
American Buffalo or Bison (which got extinct due to hunting for farming). dogs,
coyotes, rabbits
Velds
O'S
\ '
J o h M j
V R
O K m V
In South Africa
At heights of 6001200 km
Cold and dry winters (510 degrees celsius) with July as coldest month
Red Grass, acacia, maroola with lions, leopards, cheetahs and kudu
Ranches, Cowboys for cattle rearing, Merino sheep reared for wool
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Tundra vegetation
Thick fur and skin to prevent heat loss, pad of fat in feet to walk on snow.
Forest Fires
Wildlife
Critically Endangered
Cheetah
Pinkheaded duck
Mountain quail
Endangered Species
Black Buck Crocodile Indian wild ass, Indian rhino, Lion tailed Macaque, Sangai
(Brown deer in Manipur), Nicobar megapode
Vulnerable Species
Threatened species
Himalayan Yew, a medicinal plant producing taxol (Barks, needles, roots) found in
H.P, Arunachal Pradesh.
Rare Species
Himalayan brown bear, wild asiatic buffalo, desert fox, hornbill, Cycas Dyer
endemic to Eastern Ghats.
Endemic species
Andaman Teal, Nicobar pigeon, Andaman wild pig, Mithun in Arunachal Pradesh
Extinct Species
Depletion
Colonial period exploitation for timber, railways, commerce etc put a heavy loss.
Enrichment Plantation
A particular species grown extensively which eliminated original species from that
land
Forest and wildlife are vital to quality of life in India. Poverty is the outcome
of environment degradation.
They are centres of not only biodiversity but also cultural diversity. Tribals,
villagers are dependent on forests for timber, forest produce, water etc.
traditionally attached to them. Some children who are not educated in any school
know these traditional values of trees, their medicinal properties etc.
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Reserve forests
Most valuable
Protected forests
>1/3rd of forests
Unclassed Forests
National animal
Tiger reserves
BhadraKarnataka
SimlipalOdisha
KanhaMadhya Pradesh
ManasAssam
CorbettUK
PeriyarKerala
Community Conservation
In recent times, tigers, elephants have clashed with humans mainly in villages.
This has happened due to increasing settlements inside or nearby
However, many villages do not harm these animals and take preventive measures.
Insurance of animals or immediate compensation
Some movements
2.Farmer and citizen groups for conservation like Beej Bachao Andolan in Tehri and
Navdanya.
National bird
Peacock
Migratory birds like Siberian crane, Stork, Flamingo, Pintail Duck, Curlew,
Pelican migrate and come during winter. (December
to March)
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WILDLIFE WEEK
ECOSYSTEM
LITHOSPHERE
Crust
Mantle
Innermost part of earth and is divided into inner and outer core.
Contains iron and nickel in molten form (nife) at very high temperature and
pressure
Igneous rocks
Extrusive rocks which are formed when lava gets cooled fast to form fine granules
on surface of earth.(ExBasalt)
Intrusive rocks are formed when lava is trapped in crust and undergo slow cooling
leading to formation of large grains. (ExGranite)
Contains ironore (North Sweden), Copper & Nickel (Ontario, Canada), Chromites &
Platinum
Sedimentary Rocks
Metamorphic Rocks
Formed after igneous and sedimentary rocks undergo great heat and pressure and may
form lava or solidify to rock.
Minerals have certain physical properties and fixed chemical composition. All
minerals are rocks but all rocks are not minerals.
Lithospheric Plates
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Endogenic forces
Exogenic Forces
Rivers
Waterfalls
Meanders
OxBow Lake
Floodplains
Leeves
Distributaries
Delta
Seawaves
Sea cliffsErosion by sea waves forming steep rocky coast vertically above sea
water.
Beach is a depositional feature of sea waves.
Wind
Mushroom rocks are formed after erosion of base and sideways by wind
ATMOSPHERE
Nitrogen is 78%, oxygen is 21%, Argon is 0.04%, Carbon Dioxide is 0.03%, Argon is
0.93%
Structure
Exosphere
-640
km
Thermosphere S
Ionosphere
-80 85
km
Mesosphere
\
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Stratosphere
Ozone layer
^7 I/ m
/ Will
Troposphere
Troposphere
Average height is 13 km
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Stratosphere
Average height is 50 km
Airplanes fly
Ozone layer
Thermosphere
Contains ionosphere
Meteorites burn
Radiowaves transmission
Exosphere
Air Pressure
Body exerts pressure which can cause bursting of vessels. Hence, protective suits
in space.
Cyclones
Tidal surge is dangerous where 710 m high waves can inundate 20 km inside coast.
Moisture
Orographic rainfall
Cyclonic rainfall
Convection rainfall
Jet Planes leave white trail behind as the moisture from their engine condenses.
WATER 2.7% only fresh water. Most water in glaciers, icecaps and salty oceans and
seas.
Terrarium
Dead sea has 45 parts per thousand. Swimmers can float in it due to increased
density.
Tsunami or Harbour waves
Pacific ocean has early warning system to give 3 hour early notice.
Indian Ocean has less seismic activity and no such warning system.
TIDES
Spring tide
When sun and moon are in diagonals to earth then tides are low.
Neap Tide
When sun and moon are in same line then highest tides called Neap tides.
Ocean currents
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1.Absorption of Co2
2.Inorganic to organic.
Thermohaline circulation
1.At equator/tropics
2.At temperate/polar
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Thermohaline Circulation
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Areas where warm and cold currents meet are best fishing grounds and foggy areas
difficult for navigation.
Global warming and climate change will affect seasonal patterns in India leading
to defecient rainfall.
Water for cultivation, sanitation purposes except drinking can be met through
properly recycled water.
Water conservation
Underground tankas in Bikaner, Barmer, Phalodi for storing rain water or palar
pani. It beats the summer heat too.
Tamil Nadu has made rooftop rainwater harvesting compulsory in all houses with
penal provisions.
Dams are multipurpose projects and will breathe life to village economy and cause
rapid industralisation and urbanisation.
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Dams, barrages have killed natural flow of rivers. This has led to excessive
sedimentation, poor cleaning capacity of rivers.
Wildlife both aquatic and terrestrial through floods, inundation are affected.
Issue arises in upstream and downstream states with respect to dams, height of
water in dams, barrages, pollution, agriculture, excessive public use
etc.
Disputes
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etc
Amendment in 2002 prevents change in verdicts before 2002 but not after 2002. It
prohibits tribunals from forming a new tribunals for an
earlier case.
Many more tribunals on Ravi and Beas and New Krishna disputes.
Section 262(2) was applied as members of CA thought that these disputes would not
arise. Moreover they thought of bypassing
But tribunals have become centres of adversial proceedings and protracted delay in
results.
Telangana water issue
Mission kakatiya to renovate tubewells, borewells, tanks ands build new lakes.
Why?
2.River disputes
3.Depleting groundwater
Issues
1.Lack of funds.
3.MNREGA
Renovation was proposed to be done through MNREGA related work but central
government has decreased funds in it.
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TRANSPORT
Roads
Railways
Waterways
6 inland waterways.
Airways
River Basins
Tropical Evergreen Forests, thick cover which block sunlight from reaching to
ground
Birds like Toucans, Bird of Paradise, animals like sloth and ant eating Tapirs,
Deforestation a major issue with recent water scarcity in Sao Paulo, Brazil as
absence of Amazon forests will decrease rainfall
dyvii disiillerks.cenu.iit
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Pollution in Ganges
Chemical industries paper pulp, glass, tanneries, sugar mills, brass and metal
ware
3.Hydroelectric projects
5.Climate change
6.Other
Projects yet
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The government focused mainly on STPs in different cities but none of these STPs
were constructed simultaneously and many still remain in
Moreover, STPs were not maintained and repaired. This caused shut down of many
STPs and others ran on low capacity.
Corporates being roped in to solve the above issues new STPs to be setup in 118
urban centres which are the new focus areas apart from main
13,000 crores for upkeep of existing plants and installing new ones.
5.National Ganga River Basin Authority funded by 70:30 with centre and states
contribution.
A world bank funded National Ganga River Basin Project (NGRBP) of Rs 7,000 crores
and Japan International Corpration Agency
CLEANUP ACT
The legislation would pave the way for a Centralised Authority on Ganga
Cleaning
on Ganga cleaning
A new law would require consent of 11 riparian states hence centre following a
federal approach in cleaning Ganga
Cremation in the open 100 new crematoriums and repairing old ones
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DESERTS
Sahara desert
Hot tropical desert largest on earth (8.54 million km2) covering 11 African
countries
Crude oil in Libya, Algeria, Egypt, Nigeria with Iron, phosphorous, manganese,
uranium as other minerals.
India's relations with Mozambique (supplies coal, natural gas), zambia etc
Sunlight scorching due to thin atmosphere. Sun stroke and frost bite at the same
time.
Winters temperature are below 40 degrees celsius. Day temp. above zero degrees.
Drass is the coldest place on earth.
Even then Indian army is in Drass and other extremely cold regions protecting
our country. SALUTE!
Apples, apricots and walnuts, willows, poplar trees but overall sparse vegetation.
Scant 10 cm rainfall.
Leh is the capital of Ladakh. NH 1A connects Leh to Kashmir through Zoji LA pass
Lipulekh pass in Almora, Uttarakhand opens in IndiaChina border trade from June 1
to Oct 31
Soil
Sandy soil
Large particles
Cotton growth
Loamy soil
Pulses, oilseeds
Clayey soil
SOIL PROFILE
Soil Types
Alluvial Soils
In piedmont plains or upper part of river valleys coarse soil and larger
particles.
Soils in drier areas are alkaline and can be used after irrigation.
Black Soil
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Formed from igneous rocks in low rainfall areas of eastern and southern parts of
deccan plateau.
Laterite Soil
Intensive leaching in rainfall and low humus content due to high temperature where
bacteria gets destroyed.
Kerala, Karnataka, T.N, M.P, Hilly Odisha & Assam.
Tea, Coffee grown in hilly areas after soil conservation techniques, use of
fertilizers, manures.
Arid Soils
Red to brown
Saline, sandy soils with excessive evaporation gives alt in areas like Kachh.
Forest Soils
Hilly sides have loamy and silty soil with coarse soils in upper slopes.
Soil Conservation
Soil erosion
Mulching
Contour Barriers
Rock Dams
Terrace Farming
Contour Ploughing
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Shelterbelts/Strip cropping
Intercropping
RESOURCES
Natural
1.Actual Resources
Quantity is known
2.Potential Resources
1.Altitude
2.Terrain
3.Climate
Extraction of Minerals
1.Mining
2.Drilling
3.Quarrying
1.Subsistence farming
Shifting cultivation
Slash & Burn Agriculture, Jhumming in N.E India, Milpa in Mexico, Roca in Brazil,
Ladang in Indonesia, Malaysia.
Nomadic herding
3 main areas are North Africa, Arabian Peninsula to Central China, Mongolia and
Herdsmen move from one place to another due to climatic constraints and terrain
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2.Commercial Farming
Mixed farming
Rubber Industry
It should deal with gradewise production targets, import targets and sustainable
price
Tapping area has decreased with tapping area only 56% of the total area under
rubber
Mediterranean Agriculture
Horticulture
Flowers in gardens
Rice
China>India>Japan>SL>Egypt
West Bengal, Bangladesh grow crops >3 times due to favourable conditions.
Wheat
Millets
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Maize
Commercial use food only 23% of produce poultry feed, breweries, livestock
Value for protein rich maize enhanced beta carotene or Vitamin A fed to
livestock with genetically enhanced concentration of lysine and methionine
Profitable, less water requirements give edge over rice, wheat, cotton, jute
High productivity of 12 tonnes per hectare fast export and transport facilities
Cotton
JUTE
Requires alluvial soil humid climate, high temperature with high rainfall
Major producers in world India (62%, Largest producer but net importer) Bangladesh
(36%, Largest exporter) Myanmar (2%)
MarchApril to JulyAugust
Problems
1.Agricultural
Volatile prices
2.Government's apathy
*Under Jute packaging materials act, 1987 mandatory packing of sugars and
certain products in Jute bags
No labour rights, gratuity, dearness allowances and payments kept by jute mills.
This demoralises employment in Jute sector and make it a non
profitable venture.
Recent decision of government to exempt sugar mills from packing in Jute bags
created furore.
4.Mafia in smuggling
Cheap imports from Nepal and Bangladesh and mills put their seal on these bags and
sell to government. Local farmers are hit.
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Government steps
Mini mission I : R&D in jute sector to develop HYV seeds, short duration crops
etc
Mini mission II : R&D to farmers and suggest them measures of growing jute
profitably by S&T knowledge
90% in food grain and 20% in sugar reserved for jute packaging
Standing Advisory Committee under Ministry of Textiles deals with cases related to
jute packaging
Coffee
Warm and wet climate timely showers in march help in blossoming of flowers and
cherries formation.
Welldrained loamy soils
Grown first at Baba Budan Hills, Western Ghats 70% production in Karnataka.
Coffee board of India estimates production annually 5.9 bags or approx 3.47 lakh
tonnes in 201415
Woes
White stem borer and coffee leaf rust affected Arabica while Robusta is a
resistant crop
Tea
Welldrained loamy soils and gentle slopes 100150 cm rainfall sulphur rich
Well drained soils hence grown on slopes of hills valleys too can support growth
lest it is well drained
Kenya (Largest exporter at the moment giving trouble to India), India, China, SL
Problems
Need to skill them for other works provide social security specially to small tea
growers take action against insensitive management
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India exports to Russia, Iran, Pakistan facing competition from other countreis
KRUCIAL program for export promotion where Indian delegates meet their foreign
counterparts Kazakhstan, Russia, China, Iran, Arab Republic of
developed.
Energy intensive industries like Aluminium industry are located near power
stations, hydroelectric stations.
Raw materials needed are Iron ore (hematite), Limestone, Magnesium (dolomite),
coal (10 tonnes for 1 tonne ore), manganese
Steel is formed with iron ore mixed with coal, limestone in a blast furnace.
Trends in location
1.Before 1800
2.1800 AD to 1950
3.After 1950 AD
Situated near ports, raw materials, power are transported/imported to industry and
exports done easily.
Hugli as port
Pittsburgh
Europe
Issues
ORE related
High royalty fees 15% District Mineral Foundation 30% of royalty and National
Mineral Trust around 2%
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Steel related
Cheap imports from China China itself imports ore from Brazil, Australia etc and
produces cheap steel
Cotton
Traditional cotton industry met with tough competition from cheap textiles of
Manchester, U.K. Import duties were very less. India
was turned from a net exporter to net importer. It started supplying raw materials
i.e cotton to Britain. Thus our industry got crippled.
1st textile mill at Fort Gloster, Kolkata in 1818 and 1st mechanised textile mill
in Mumbai in 1854. Its warm, moist climate, skilled labour favored.
Modern industries are scattered all over the country as warm, humid climate can be
created artificially, transport through railways, mechanised mills
Issues at present
1.Rationalising MSPs
4.A comprehensive National Textile Policy is needed for level playing field, equal
wages, costs, tariff rates across the country.
Osaka
Manchester of Japan
Yodo river
Services such as roads, car parks, waste disposal can be managed collectively.
Others are NCR Gurgaon, Noida, Hyderabad, Chennai, Pune, Kochi, Thiruvanthapuram.
These areas basically Bangalore, California have decent climate, skilled labour
force, cheap living, educational institutions,
HUMAN RESOURCES
1.Geography
Climate, Topography (Plains like Nile, Gnga rivers), Soil, Water, Minerals
2.Social
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3.Cultural
4.Economic
Mumbai, Delhi
Population Pyramid
Drainage basin
Any elevated area such as mountain or upland which divides two river basins is
called a Water Divide
Drainage Patterns
Trellis (Tributaries at right angles as hard and soft rocks are parallel to each
other)
Carry huge loads of silt, sand due to erosion, weathering, deposition etc.
Tributaries like Zaskar, Shyok, Hunza, Nubra, Gilgit, Shigra, Dras, Gasting join
in Kashmir region
Right bank tributaries Khurram,,Tochi, Gomal, Viboa, Sangar. They all originate in
the Sulaiman
ranges.
'Panjnad' a little above Mithankot five rivers of Punjab, namely Satluj, Beas,
Ravi, Chenab, Jhelum. It finally discharges into the Arabian
Flows in India only through the Leh district in Jammu and Kashmir.
Satluj (Indira Gandhi canal), Ravi (Rohtang Pass), Beas (Beas Kund), Chenab,
Jhelum join at Mithankot in Pakistan.
2900 km in length but majority of basin is in Pakistan with 1/3rd in H.P. Punjab,
J&K
Alaknanda and Bhagirathi which emerges from Gangotri glacier join at Devprayag in
Uttarakhand to form GANGA.
Ghaghara, Gandak, Kosi the left bank tributaries of Ganga rise at Nepal Himalayas
Chambal join Yamuna, Son, Betwa, Sharda are right bank tributaries
This delta is largest and fastest growing delta in the world and comprises of
Sundari trees, wildlife diversity including the most fierce
It is 2500 km in length and plains extend from Ambala in Punjab to Sunderban for
1800 km with fall of only 300m in elevation.
This increases its massive erosion capacity leading to meanders, oxbow lakes
downstream.
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Takes a 'U' turn at a gorge near Namcha Bharwa (7757m peak) and enters Arunachal
Pradesh as 'Dihang'
Enters Bangladesh with huge silt and rainfall fed from Indian landmass forming
small riverine islands in Assam.
Cause floods in Assam and Bangladesh as changes its course suddenly due to huge
siltation.
Shorter course with shallow depth as terrain is rocky, rocks are old etc
Rift valley for two rivers which flow into Arabian Sea and rest flow into BoB.
Narmada River Basin
Rises in Amarkantak Hills in Madhya Pradesh and tributaries join at right angles
(trellis)
Marble rocks in Jabalpur where river flows through a deep gorge and Dhuadhan
waterfalls
Tapi Basin
Flows through a rift valley with short course and drains into Arabian Sea
Mahanadi Basin
Rise in Chattisgarh
Godavari Basin
Rises from Western Ghats near Nashik and flows for 1500 km into BoB (Hence called
as Dakshin Ganga)
Krishna Basin
Rises from a spring near Mahabaleshwar, Maharashtra flows for 100 km into BoB
Kaveri Basin
Rises in Brahmagirii range of Western Ghats flows for 760 km into BoB at
Cuddalore, TN.
Other rivers
LAKES
Formed by rivers when they form meanders, oxbow lakes, lagoons in coastal areas
etc.
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Salt water lake Chilka (Largest), Pulicat, Kolleru, Sambhar lake in Rajasthan
(seasonal), Dal lakes etc
Artificial Lakes due to dams like Guru Gobind Sagar (Bhakra Nangal Project) on
Satluj river.
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