Social Sciences, asked by anamikasubha850, 6 months ago

extra questions of class 8 history chapter 4​

Answers

Answered by muskan558
4

Question 1

What problems did shifting cultivators face under British rule?

Answer:

The life of shifting cultivators was directly connected to the forest. So, when the British brought changes in forest laws, their life was badly affected. The British extended their control over all forests and declared that forests were state property. Some forests were classified as Reserved Forests for they produced timber which the British wanted. In these forests, people were not allowed to move freely and practice jhum cultivations. As a result, many jhum cultivators had to move to other areas in search of work.

Question 2

How did the powers of tribal chiefs change under colonial rule?

Answer:

Change in the Powers of the Tribal Chiefs under Colonial Rule

Before the arrival of the British in India, tribal chiefs were important people.

They had economic power.

They had the right to administer and control their territories.

In some areas, they had their own policy.

They decided on the local rules of land and forest management.

The British changed their functions and powers considerably.

They were allowed to keep their land titles over a cluster of villages and rent outlands.

They were divested of their administrative power.

They were forced to follow laws made by the British in India.

They also had to pay tribute to the British, and discipline the tribal groups

on behalf of the British.

They lost the authority they had earlier enjoyed amongst their people.

Now they were unable to fulfill their traditional functions.

Question 3

What accounts for the anger of the tribals against the dikus?

Answer:

The tribals wanted to drive out the dikus—missionaries, moneylenders, Hindu landlords, and the government because they saw them as the cause of their misery. The following facts account for their anger against the dikus:

The land policies of the British were destroying their traditional land system.

Hindu landlords and moneylenders were taking over their land.

Missionaries were criticising their traditional culture.

Question 4

What was Birsa’s vision of a golden age? Why do you think such a vision appealed to the people of the region?

Answer:

Birsa was deeply influenced by many of the ideas he came in touch within his growing-up years. The movement that he led aimed at reforming tribal society. He urged the Munda to give up drinking liquor, clean their village, and stop believing in witchcraft and sorcery. He often remembered the gloden past of the Mundas, when they lived a good life, constructed embankments, tapped natural springs, planted trees and orchards, practiced cultivation to earn their living. They did not kill their brethren and relatives. They lived honestly.

Birsa wanted to restore this glorious past. Such a vision appealed to the people of the region because they were very much eager to lead a free life. They had got fed up with the colonial forest laws and the restrictions that were imposed on them.

Question 5

Find out from your parents, friends or teachers, the names of some heroes of other tribal revolts in the twentieth century. Write their story in your own words.

Answer:

Students are suggested to do this work themselves.

Explanation:

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