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Part 3 CH 7 One Word

This document contains 25 multiple choice questions about the topic of print culture and the modern world. It tests knowledge on various aspects of print history such as calligraphy, key figures like Martin Luther and Marco Polo, early printed books like the Diamond Sutra, Gutenberg's Bible, and penny chapbooks. It also covers topics like folktales collected by the Grimm Brothers, early Indian newspapers, and women writers of the 19th century in India. The questions have a single correct multiple choice answer provided for each.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
101 views18 pages

Part 3 CH 7 One Word

This document contains 25 multiple choice questions about the topic of print culture and the modern world. It tests knowledge on various aspects of print history such as calligraphy, key figures like Martin Luther and Marco Polo, early printed books like the Diamond Sutra, Gutenberg's Bible, and penny chapbooks. It also covers topics like folktales collected by the Grimm Brothers, early Indian newspapers, and women writers of the 19th century in India. The questions have a single correct multiple choice answer provided for each.

Uploaded by

itismevivekrai
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Print Culture and the Modern World Class 10 MCQs Questions with Answers

Question 1.
Calligraphy is the art of:
(a) beautiful writing
(b) painting
(c) telling stories
(d) stories for children.

Answer

Answer: (a) beautiful writing

Question 2.
The Protestant movement was started by:
(a) Erasmus
(b) Martin Luther
(c) Gutenherg
(d) Lousie Sebastein Merceir.

Answer

Answer: (b) Martin Luther

Question 3.
Marco Polo was a traveller from:
(a) England
(b) France
(c) Italy
(d) Austria.

Answer

Answer: (c) Italy


Question 4.
Diamond Sutra, the oldest were printed book is in language.
(a) Chinese
(b) Korean
(c) Indian
(d) Japanese.

Answer

Answer: (d) Japanese.

Question 5.
Gutenberg was the first to print the
(a) Dictionary
(b) Ballads
(c) Bible
(d) novel

Answer

Answer: (c) Bible

Question 6.
Penny Chapbooks were:
(a) Journals
(b) novels
(c) pocket sized books
(d) ritual calendars.

Answer

Answer: (c) pocket sized books

Question 7.
Folk tales were collected from peasants in Germany and completed in the form of book by:
(a) Thomas Paine
(b) Erasmus
(c) Jean Jacques Rousseau
(d) Grimm Brothers.

Answer

Answer: (d) Grimm Brothers.

Question 8.
Sambad Kaumudi, a popular journal was published by :
(a) Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay
(b) Sarat Chandra Chatterjee
(c) Iswarchandra Vidyasagar
(d) Raja Rammohan Roy.

Answer

Answer: (d) Raja Rammohan Roy.

Question 9.
‘Chote Aur Bade ka Sawal’ was written by a mill worker from Kanpur. He was:
(a) Kashibaba
(b) Sudharshan Chakr
(c) Ram Chaddha
(d) Ramkrishan.

Answer

Answer: (a) Kashibaba

Question 10.
Gulamgiri was written by
(a) Dr. B.R. Ambedkar
(b) Jyotiba Phule
(c) E.V. Ramaswamy Naicker
(d) Kandukuri Veresalingam.

Answer

Answer: (b) Jyotiba Phule

Question 11.
The first printing press in India was brought by the :
(a) Portuguese missionaries
(b) French missionaries
(c) Dutch missionaries
(d) English missionaries.

Answer

Answer: (a) Portuguese missionaries

Question 12.
What were ballads ?

Answer

Answer: A historical account or folk tale in verse, usually sung or recited.

Question 13.
Who said, “Printing is the ultimate gift of God and the greatest one” ?

Answer

Answer: Martin Luther.


Question 14.
Name two scholars whose writings inspired French people.

Answer

Answer: Voltaire and Rousseau.

Question 15.
Name any two women novelists of the 19th century.

Answer

Answer: Jane Austen and George Eliot.

Question 16.
Who invented power-driven cylindrical press ?

Answer

Answer: Richard M. Hoe of New York.

Question 17.
State any two advantages of power driven cylindrical press.

Answer

Answer:
(i) The press was capable of printing 8,000 sheets per hour.
(ii) The press was useful for printing newspapers.

Question 18.
Name any two languages in which Indian manuscript was prepared before the age of print.
Answer

Answer:
(1) Sanskrit
(2) Arabic
(3) Persian
(4) Bengali.

Question 19.
Why did Governor General Warren Hastings persecute Hickey ?

Answer

Answer: Because he criticised the British Government regarding slave trade.

Question 20.
Which was first Indian newspaper ? By whom was it brought ?

Answer

Answer: Bengal Gazette. It was brought by Ganadhar Bhattacharya.

Question 21.
Name the printing presses which published numerous religious texts in vernaculars from
the 1880s.

Answer

Answer:
(i) Naval Kishore Press – Lucknow.
(ii) Shri Venkateshwar Press – Bombay.
Question 22.
Who was the author of Amar Jihan ?

Answer

Answer: Rashsundari Debi.

Question 23.
Who wrote Istri Dharam Vichar ?

Answer

Answer: Ram Chadtha.

Question 24.
Name any four Indian women writers of the 19th century.

Answer

Answer:
(1) Rashsundari Debi
(2) Kailashbashini Debi
(3) Tarabai Shinde
(4) Pandita Ramabai.

Question 25.
What was the theme of the book Gulamgiri ?

Answer

Answer:
The basic theme of the book was about the injustice of the caste system.
Part 2

NCERT Solutions for Class 10 Social History Chapter 7 Print Culture and the Modern
World

Q.1. Give reasons for the following :


(a) Woodblock print only came to Europe after 1295. [CBSE 2013]
(b) Martin Luther was in favour of print and spoke out in praise of it.
(c) The Roman Catholic Church began keeping an Index of Prohibited books from the
mid-sixteenth century.
(d) Gandhi said the fight for ‘Swaraj is a fight for the liberty of speech, liberty of the press,
and freedom of association.
Ans. (a) Refer Q.No. 5 HOTS.

(b)

1. In 1517 Martin Luther wrote Ninety Five Theses criticising many of the practices and
rituals of the Roman Catholic Church.
2. A printed copy of this was posted on a church door in Wittenberg.
3. It challenged the Church to debate his ideas.
4. Luther’s writings were immediately reproduced in vast numbers and read widely.
5. This led to a division within the Church and to the beginning of the Protestant
Reformation.
6. Luther’s translation of the New Testament sold 5,000 copies within a few weeks and a
second edition appeared within three months. All this became possible due to printing
technology. Deeply grateful to print, Luther said, “Printing is the ultimate gift of God
and the greatest one.”
7. Several scholars, in fact, think that the print brought about a new intellectual
atmosphere and helped spread the new ideas that led to the Reformation.

(c) The Roman Catholic Church began keeping an Index of Prohibited Books from the
mid-sixteenth century due to the following reasons :

1. The print and popular religious literature encouraged many distinctive individual
interpretations of faith even among little-educated working people. For example,
Manocchio, a miller in Italy, after reading some books available in his locality,
reinterpreted the message of the Bible and formulated a view of God and Creation
that enraged the Roman Catholic Church. Various types of questions were raised
against the faith and the Church. Manocchio was hauled up twice and ultimately
executed.
2. As the Roman Catholic Church was troubled by such writings, it imposed severe
controls over publishers and began to maintain an Index of Prohibited Books from
1558.
(d) Gandhi said the fight for Swaraj is a fight for the liberty of speech, liberty of the press,
and freedom of association due to the following reasons :

1. After the revolt of 1857, as the vernacular press became assertively nationalist, the
colonial government tried to control it. Thus in 1878, the Vernacular Press Act was
passed modelled on the Irish Press Laws. It provided the government with extensive
rights to censor reports and editorials in the vernacular press. Whenever there was a
seditious report, the newspaper was warned and if the warning was ignored, the press
was liable to be seized and the printing machinery confiscated.
2. When Punjab revolutionaries were deported in 1907, Bal Gangadhar Tilak wrote
with great sympathy about them in his Kesari. This led to his imprisonment in 1908.
There were widespread protests all over India.
3. During the First World War under the Defence of India Rules, 22 newspapers had to
furnish securities. Of these, 18 shut down rather than comply with government
orders.
4. Similarly during the Khilafat and Non-Cooperation Movement, the Government of
India was trying to crush the three powerful vehicles of expressing (Liberty of speech,
liberty of press, and freedom of association) and cultivating public opinion. Thus the
fight for Swaraj was a fight for this freedom than anything else.

Q.2. Write short notes to show that you know about:


(a) The Gutenberg Press.
(b) The Erasmus’s idea of the printed book.
(c) The Vernacular Press Act. [CBSE Sept. 2011, 2012]
Ans. (a) Refer Q.No. 4, Long Answer Type Questions.

(b) Erasmus’s idea of the printed book: Erasmus, a Latin scholar, and a Catholic reformer,
who criticized the excesses of Catholicism, but kept his distance from, Luther, expressed
deep anxiety about printing. He wrote in Adages (1508) :
‘To what corner of the world do they not fly, these swarms of new books? It may be that
one here and there contributes something worth knowing, but the very multitude of them is
hurtful to scholarship because it creates a glut and even in good things, satiety is most
harmful… [printers] fill the world with books, not just trifling things (such as I write,
perhaps), but stupid, ignorant, slanderous, scandalous, raving, irreligious and seditious
books and the number of them is such that even the valuable publications lose their value.’

(c) The Vernacular Press Act: The revolt of 1857 forced the government to curb the
freedom of the press. After the revolt, enraged Englishmen demanded a clampdown on the
‘native’ press. As vernacular newspapers became assertively nationalist, the colonial
government began debating measures of strict control.

In 1878, the Vernacular Press Act was passed, on the model of Irish Press Laws. It
provided the government with extensive rights to censor reports and editorials in the
vernacular press. The government started keeping regular track of the vernacular
newspapers published in different provinces. When a report was judged as seditious, the
newspapers were given a warning and if the warning was ignored, the press was liable to be
seized, and the printing machinery could be confiscated.

Q.3. What did the spread of print culture in the nineteenth century India mean to :
(a) Women
(b) The poor
(c) Reformers
Ans. (a) Refer Q. No. 17, Long Answer Type Questions.
(b) Refer Q. No. 3, Value Based Questions.

(c) Reformers: From the early nineteenth century there were intense debates around
religious issues. Different groups differed on interpretations of the beliefs of different
religions. Criticism and campaigns were going on. The coming of print made a lot of
difference as mentioned below:

1. The coming of print culture meant that the reformers could now spread their ideas
more quickly among the masses.
2. The debates on existing practices were printed in newspapers and journals.
3. A large number of people could now participate in debates relating to religious and
social reforms.
4. New ideas emerged through these debates about widow immolation, monotheism,
Brahmanical priesthood and idolatry.
5. Different ideas were printed in the everyday spoken language of ordinary people. For
example, Raja Rammohan Roy published the Sambad Kaumudi from 1821 to spread
his ideas.
6. The reformers used the print culture to reach the masses.
7. In addition to this, social reformers used the print culture to restrict excessive
drinking among workers to spread literacy.
8. Among Muslims, the Ulama used cheap lithographic presses, published Persian and
Urdu translations of holy scriptures, and printed religious newspapers and tracts.
The meanings of Islamic doctrines were explained.
9. Among Hindus, too, print encouraged the reading of religious texts, especially in the
vernacular languages. The first printed edition of the Ramcharitmanas of Tulsidas
came out from Calcutta in 1810.
10. By the mid-nineteenth century, cheap lithographic editions flooded north Indian
markets. From the 1880s the Naval Kishore Press at Lucknow and the Shri
Venkateshwar Press in Bombay published numerous religious texts in vernaculars.
These texts reached a large number of people encouraging debates, discussions on
various issues.

Q.4. Write about the different innovations in printing technology during the 19th
century? [CBSE Sept. 2010]
Ans. (i) By the mid-nineteenth century, Richard M. Hoe of New York had perfected the
power-driven cylindrical press. This was capable of printing 8,000 sheets per hour. This
press was particularly useful for printing newspapers.
(ii) In the late nineteenth century, the offset press was developed which could print up to
six colours at a time.
(iii) From the turn of the twentieth century, electrically operated presses accelerated
printing operations.

Q.5. Why did some people in the eighteenth century Europe think that print culture would
bring enlightenment and end despotism? [CBSE Sept. 2010, 2011]
Or
Assess the impact of print revolution on the European society. [CBSE 2013]
Ans. (i) Spreading of new ideas: After the coming of the print culture, the ideas of scientists
and philosophers now became more accessible to the common people. Ancient and
medieval scientific texts were compiled and published.
(ii) Scientific discoveries: Maps and more accurate scientific diagrams were widely printed.
When scientists like Issac Newton began to publish their discoveries, they could influence a
much wider circle of scientifically-minded readers.
(iii) Writings of scholars: The writings of thinkers such as Thomas Paine, Voltaire and
Jean Jacques Rousseau were also widely printed, and could gain popularity. Thus, their
ideas about science, reasoning and rationality found their way into popular literature.
(iv) Books as a medium of progress: By the mid-18th century, books became a medium of
spreading progress and enlightenment which could change society and the world. It was
also believed that the books could literate society from despotism and tyranny.
(v) Ideas of enlightened thinkers: The print popularised the ideas of the enlightened
thinkers like that of Martin Luther who attacked the authority of the Church and the
despotic power of the state, e.g., Voltaire and Rousseau.
(vi) A new culture of dialogue and debate: The print created a new culture of dialogue and
debate and the public, became aware of reasoning and recognized the need to question the
existing ideas and beliefs.

Q.6. Why did some people fear the effect of easily available printed books? Choose one
example from Europe and one from India. [CBSE Sept. 2011]
Or
Explain the role played by print in bringing about a division in the Roman Catholic
Church. [CBSE Sept. 2011]
Or
Explain the role played by print in the spreading of Protestant Reformation. [CBSE 2012,
2013]
Ans. Not everyone welcomed the printed books and those, who did, also had fear about
them. Many were of the opinion that printed words and the wider circulation of books,
would have a negative impact on people’s minds. They feared that if there was no control
over what was printed and read, then rebellious and irreligious thoughts might gain
importance. There was also fear in the minds of scholars that the authority of ‘valuable’
literature would be destroyed. The new print was criticized by religious authorities,
monarchs, as well as by writers and artists.

Let us consider the implication of this in one sphere of life in early modern Europe, i.e.,
religion. Martin Luther was a German monk, priest, professor, and Church reformer. In
1517, he wrote Ninety Five Theses and openly criticised many of the practices and rituals of
the Roman Catholic Church. A printed copy of this was pasted on a Church door in
Wittenberg. It challenged the Church to debate his ideas. Luther’s writings were
immediately copied in vast numbers and read widely. This led to a division within the
Church and led to the beginning of the Protestant Reformation.

Manx; conservative FUndus believed that a literate girl would be widowed and Muslims
believed that educated women could get corrupted by reading Urdu romances. There were
many instances of women defying this prohibition.

Q.7. What were the effects of the spread of print culture for the poor people in the
nineteenth century India ?
Ans. Refer Q. No. 3, Value Based Questions.

Q.8. Explain how the print culture assisted the growth of nationalism in India. [CBSE Sept.
2010, 2011]
Ans. (i) New ideas and debates : There were many who criticised the existing practices and
campaigned for reforms, while others countered the arguments of the reformers. These
debates were carried out openly in public and in print. Printed tracts and newspapers not
only spread the new ideas, but they also shaped the nature of the debate. All this assisted
the growth of nationalism.

(ii) Connecting various communities : Print did not only stimulate the publication of
conflicting opinions amongst communities, but it also connected communities and people
living in different parts of India. Newspapers conveyed news from one place to another,
creating pan-Indian identities.

(iii) Print and newspaper : Despite repressive measures, nationalist newspapers grew in
numbers in all parts of India. They reported on colonial misrule and encouraged
nationalist activities. When Punjab revolutionaries were deported in 1907, Bal Gangadhar
Tilak wrote with great sympathy about them in Kesari.

(iv) Various novels on national history: Many novels written by Indian novelists like
Bankim’s Anandamath created a sense of pan-Indian belonging. Munshi Premchand’s
novel, Godan highlighted how Indian peasants were exploited by the colonial bureaucrats.

(v) Various images of Bharatmata : Printers like Raja Ravi Verma and Rabindranath
Tagore produced images of Bharatmata which produced a sense of nationalism among
Indians. The devotion to mother figure came to be seen as evidence of one’s nationalism.

Multiple Choice Questions

1. Which one of the following is the oldest Japanese book? [CBSE (CCE) 2011]
(a) Sutta Pitaka
(b) Diamond Sutra
(c) Maha Vamsa
(d) Dipa Vamsa

2. The first printing press was developed by [CBSE (CCE) 2011]


(a) Marco Polo
(b) Kitagawa Utamaro
(c) Johann Gutenberg
(d) Erasmus

3. Who wrote about the injustices of the caste system in ‘Gulamgiri’? [CBSE (CCE) 2011]
(a) Raja Rammohan Roy
(b) Jyotiba Phule
(c) Bal Gangadhar Tilak
(d) Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay

4. Who among the following is an enlightened thinker whose writings are said to have
created conditions for a revolution in France? [CBSE (CCE) 2011]
(a) Rousseau
(b) Louise Setastin Mercier
(c) Menocchio
(d) Johann Gutenberg

5. Which religious reformer was responsible for the Reformation Movement?


(a) Martin Luther
(b) Martin Luther King
(c) The Grimm Brothers
(d) George Elliot

6. Who among the following was not a women novelist?


(a) Jane Austen
(b) Bronte Sisters
(c) George Eliot
(d) Maxim Gorky

7. Which of the following countries was the earliest producer of printing material?
(a) Persia
(b) India
(c) China
(d) Japan

8. From where did Marcopolo bring back the knowledge of woodblock printing to Italy?
(a) China
(b) Japan
(c) Sri Lanka
(d) India

9. By whom was the New Testament first translated?


(a) Erasmus
(b) Leonardo da Vince
(c) Martin Luther
(d) Manocchio

10. In ancient India which of the following material was used for writing manuscripts?
(a) Parchments
(b) Vellum
(c) Palm leaves
(d) Paper

11. Name the first weekly magazine published in India by Gangadhar Bhattacharya.
(a) Anandabazar Patrika
(b) Bengal Gazette
(c) Yugantar
(d) Sambad Kaumudi

12. By whom was ‘Sambad Kaumudi’ published’ in 1821?


(a) Iswer Chandra Vidyasagar
(b) C.R. Das
(c) Raja Rammohun Roy
(d) Swami Vivekanand

13. ‘Amar Jiban’ is the autobiography of which of the following woman author?
(a) Rashsundari Debi
(b) Rokeya Hossein
(c) Kailashbashini Devi
(d) Pandita Ramabai

14. Who among the following was popularly known as Periyar?


(a) Dr. B.R. Ambedkar
(b) Jyotiba Phule
(c) E.V. Ramaswamy Naicker
(d) S. Naidu

15. Which one of the following best explains calligraphy?


(a) The art of painting
(b) The art of map drawing
(c) The art of beautiful and stylised writing
(d) The art of sketching
16. ‘Edo’ was the earlier name of which of the following places?
(a) Shanghai
(b) Tokyo
(c) Seoul
(d) Hongkong

17. Vellum refers to


(a) parchment made from the skin of animals.
(b) written material made from the bark of trees.
(c) paper made out of the pulp.
(d) written material made from cloth.

18. Who was Marcopolo ?


(a) German scientist
(b) English philosopher
(c) Spanish explorer
(d) Italian traveller/explorer

19. Which of the following inspired Gutenberg to design and model a printing press?
(a) Woodblock printing of China
(b) Olive press in agricultural estates
(c) Handwritten manuscripts
(d) Print technology of Japan

20 Martin Luther’s writings and ideas led to which of the following movements?
(a) Counter-Reformation Movement
(b) Renaissance Movement
(c) Reformation Movement
(d) Intellectual Movement

21. The reformation movement was launched against the corrupt practices of which of the
following group?
(a) Feudal Lords
(b) Protestant Church
(c) Catholic Church
(d) Absolute rulers

22. Which of the following refers to ‘inquisition’?


(a) Protestant tribunal to punish heretics
(b) Catholic court to try and punish the heretics
(c) The state judicial body for punishing the criminals
(d) All the above
23. Aim of the Protestant Reformation was to
(a) reform religion
(b) reform the Catholic church
(c) reform Jewish religion
(d) to protest against all reform

24. Erasmus was a


(a) Latin scholar and Catholic reformer
(b) French scholar who advocated Protestantism
(c) Swedish scholar who translated the Bible
(d) British scholar who opposed Catholic Church

25. What were chapbooks?


(a) Books which were cheap
(b) The pocket-size books sold by travelling peddler
(c) Book sold on the footpath
(d) Handwritten books

26. An alamnac refers to


(a) a ritual calendar
(b) a dictionary
(c) a religious book
(d) a long poem

27. In France what was known as ‘Biliotheque Bleue’?


(a) A blue coloured book
(b) A blue coloured, cheap book made out of poor quality paper
(c) A book made of excellent blue silk for rich people
(d) A blue coloured writing pad

28. Which 18th-century French novelist declared, ‘The printing press is the most powerful
engine of progress’ ?
(a) Rousseau
(b) Voltaire
(c) Mercier
(d) Montesquieh

29. The print culture created a condition for which of the following revolutions?
(a) French Revolution
(b) Russian Revolution
(c) Glorious Revolution
(d) American Revolution
30. Penny magazine was meant only for
(a) old people
(b) poor people
(c) women
(d) children

31. The scribes refer to


(a) Authors
(b) Poets
(c) Skilled hand writers
(d) Skilled painters

32. Which of the following refers to print revolution?


(a) Invention of the printing press
(b) Shift from hand printing to mechanical printing
(c) Revolt of people against printed matters
(d) Handwritten manuscripts for printed books

33. Mark the correct response. Due to the invention of printing press
(a) reading culture developed
(b) cost of books was reduced
(c) the time and labour required to produce books came down
(d) all the above

34. Richard M. Hoe of New York was well known for


(a) inventing the printing press
(b) perfecting the power-driven cylindrical press
(c) for inventing woodblock printing
(d) for inventing the electrical typing machine.

35. Why was James Augustus Hickey persecuted by Governor-General Warren Hastings?
(a) For poor editing of Bengal Gazette
(b) For publishing a lot of gossip about the company’s Senior Official
(c) For writing propaganda material against the Indian
(d) For publishing sub-standard material

36. With what purpose was the Vernacular Press Act passed by Lord Lyton in 1878?
(a) To popularise Vernacular Press
(b) To supervise Vernacular Press
(c) To clamp down and censor the native press
(d) To encourage authors to write in Indian languages.

37. Why was the Vernacular Act of 1878 opposed by the Indians ?
(a) It did not allow the Indian authors to write in their newspapers.
(b) It challenged the freedom of press of the Indians.
(c) It encouraged the Indians to publish religious materials in the newspapers.
(d) To defy colonialism.

38. How did nationalist newspapers inspire nationalism in India? Mark the most
appropriate answer.
(a) By writing various articles in the newspapers.
(b) By publishing the speeches of nationalist leaders.
(c) By reporting the colonialism is the rule and encouraging nationalist activities through
the press.
(d) By encouraging Indian authors.

ANSWERS

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