જવાબ : James Watt
જવાબ : Weaving
જવાબ : Bombay
જવાબ : 1854
જવાબ : James Hargreave
જવાબ : Gomastha
જવાબ : Surat
જવાબ : Britain
જવાબ : Employed by industrialists to get new recruits
જવાબ : They did not have good quality of cotton.
જવાબ : E. T. Paull
જવાબ : Produce from the Chinese and Japanese mills flooded the Chinese market.
જવાબ : Traditional craftsperson and labourer.
જવાબ : Supervising weavers.
જવાબ : A machine which speeded up the spinning process and reduced the labour demands.
જવાબ : Iron and steel industry
જવાબ : Jobber.
જવાબ : Bengal and Bombay.
જવાબ : Bombay in 1854.
જવાબ : To eliminate any competition from outside.
જવાબ : 1733
જવાબ : 1855
જવાબ : 1750
જવાબ : 1764
જવાબ : 1854
જવાબ : 1730
જવાબ : 26 jan 1901
જવાબ : 1840
જવાબ : 1860
જવાબ : He was a popular music publisher
જવાબ : Industrialist
જવાબ : Asia
જવાબ : Calendars
જવાબ : Hoogly
જવાબ : India
જવાબ : London
જવાબ : Surat
જવાબ : Iron and steel industry
જવાબ : Dwarka Nath Tagore
જવાબ : Seth Hukumchand
જવાબ : Seth Hukumchand
જવાબ : Kanpur
જવાબ : 1876
જવાબ : Culcutta
જવાબ : 1907
જવાબ : 1850
જવાબ : Producers
જવાબ : False
જવાબ : True
જવાબ : False
જવાબ : True
જવાબ : (i) Advertisements play a very vital role in the marketing of any product.
(ii) New consumers are created is through advertisements. (iii) Advertisements make products appear desirable and necessary to the customers. (iv) They try to shape the minds of the people and create new needs. (v) The advertisement appear in newspapers, magazines, hoardings, street walls, television screens which have played a part in expanding the markets for products, and in shaping a new consumer culture.જવાબ : The Indian cotton weavers faced many problems in the 19th century:
જવાબ : Merchants moved to the countryside in Europe because:
જવાબ : Merchants from towns in Europe began employing peasants and artisans within the villages in the seventeenth century because production in urban areas was not increasing due to the presence of powerful trade guilds. While in the countryside, there was no monopolization or regulated prices, and impoverished peasants were welcoming towards these merchants.
જવાબ : Guilds were the associations of artisans or merchants who controlled the practise of their craft and trade in a particular city. They were very powerful as they were granted monopoly rights by the rulers to produce and trade in specific product. They themselves trained the people in their trade or craft. They regulated competition and restricted the entry of new people in the trade. This made it difficult for the new merchants to set up their business in towns of England.
જવાબ :
જવાબ :
જવાબ :
જવાબ : The English East India Company appointed Gomasthas for:
જવાબ : Proto-industrialization is the phase of industrialization that was not based on the factory system. Before the coming of factories, there was large-scale industrial production for an international market. This part of industrial history is known as proto-industrialization. This period was marked by merchants from towns getting products made in villages. The merchants supplied money to the peasants in the countryside. The land was becoming scarce in villages. Small plots of land were not enough to meet the need for a growing population. Peasants were looking for some additional sources of income.
જવાબ : The paid servants appointed by the East India Company to supervise weavers are called gomasthas.
The East India Company appointed them to establish a more direct control over the weavers and to eliminate traders and brokers connected with cloth trade.
જવાબ : Having earned enough from trade, some businessmen had visions of developing industrial enterprises in India.
In Bengal, Dwarkanath Tagore made his fortune in the China trade. He turned to industrial investment, setting up six joint stock companies in 1830s and 1840s.
In Bombay, Parsis like Dinshaw Petit and Jamsetjee Nusserwanjee Tata who built huge industrial empires in India accumulated their initial wealth from exports to China and raw cotton shipments to England. Seth Hukumchand, a Marwari businessman, who set up the first Indian jute mill in Calcutta in 1971, also traded with China.
જવાબ :
જવાબ :
જવાબ :
1 |
the most dynamic industry in Britain. |
A |
By offering them loans for their production |
2 |
India Company prevent the Indian weavers from dealing with other companies |
B |
war materials were produced in India |
3 |
Jute bags |
C |
Cotton and metal industries |
જવાબ :
1-C, 2-A, 3-B
1 |
Dwarkanath Tagore |
A |
Bombay |
2 |
Seth Hukumchand |
B |
Bengal |
3 |
Bhai Bhosle |
C |
Parsis of Bombay |
4 |
Dinshaw Petit |
D |
Calcutta |
જવાબ :
1-B, 2-D, 3-A, 4-C
1 |
Technological changes |
A |
Early entrepreneur of India |
2 |
India |
B |
helped the production of handloom cloth |
3 |
European companies |
C |
finer varieties of Coarser cotton came from |
4 |
Seth Hukumchand |
D |
trade through the new ports of Bombay and Calcutta came to be controlled by |
જવાબ :
1-B, 2-C, 3-D, 4-A
1 |
James Watt |
A |
devised the Spinning Jenny |
2 |
Textile Industry |
B |
Japan |
3 |
first industrial country in the world |
C |
Production processes involving carding, twisting, rolling and stapling are associated with |
4 |
James Hargreaves |
D |
improved the ‘Steam Engine’ produced by Newcomen |
જવાબ :
1-D, 2-C, 3-B, 4-A
1 |
Bombay |
A |
Industrialist |
2 |
frequent strikes in Indian industries |
B |
problems faced by cotton weavers in India |
3 |
Dwarkanath Tagore |
C |
problems was not faced by cotton weavers in India |
4 |
Imported goods were cheap |
D |
the first cotton mill set up |
જવાબ :
1-D, 2-C, 3-A, 4-B
1 |
The spinning jenny |
A |
Indian ports lost its importance during colonial rule |
2 |
job of the Gomastha |
B |
the pattern of industrial change in India conditioned |
3 |
Surat |
C |
Supervise weavers, Collect supplies & Examine the quality of the cloth |
4 |
Colonial rule |
D |
The introduction of which new technology in England angered women |
જવાબ :
1-D, 2-C, 3-A, 4-B
1 |
Surat |
A |
pre-colonial port connected India to the Gulf countries and the Red Sea ports |
2 |
Elgin Mills |
B |
an European Managing Agency dominating industrial production in India |
3 |
Jardine Skinner and Co. |
C |
not an European Managing Agency dominating industrial production in India |
જવાબ :
1-A, 2-C, 3-B
1 |
Gomasthas |
A |
Cotton factories |
2 |
Richard Arkwright |
B |
Supervisor appointed by the company |
3 |
E. T. Paul |
C |
created the cotton mill in England |
4 |
a symbol of new era in England in the late eighteenth century |
D |
produced a popular music book that had a picture on the cover page announcing the Dawn of the Century |
જવાબ :
1-B, 2-C, 3-D, 4-A
1 |
James Watt |
A |
industry finally collapsed by the end of the 19th century |
2 |
Newcomen |
B |
improved the steam engine |
3 |
Weaving |
C |
textile trade |
4 |
The British totally monopolised the |
D |
invented the first steam engine |
જવાબ :
1-B, 2-D, 3-A, 4-C
1 |
Staplers |
A |
A Fuller ‘fulls’ or gathers cloth by pleating |
2 |
Fullers |
B |
England |
3 |
the earliest factories come up |
C |
sorts wool according to its fibre |
4 |
Carding |
D |
cotton or wool fibres are prepared for spinning |
જવાબ :
1-C, 2-A, 3-B, 4-D
History
The GSEB Books for class 10 are designed as per the syllabus followed Gujarat Secondary and Higher Secondary Education Board provides key detailed, and a through solutions to all the questions relating to the GSEB textbooks.
The purpose is to provide help to the students with their homework, preparing for the examinations and personal learning. These books are very helpful for the preparation of examination.
For more details about the GSEB books for Class 10, you can access the PDF which is as in the above given links for the same.