Tribes, Nomads and Settled Communities Class 7 Extra Questions History Chapter 7

Tribes, Nomads and Settled Communities Class 7 Extra Questions Social Science History Chapter 7

NCERT Extra Questions for Class 7 Social Science History Chapter 7 Tribes, Nomads and Settled Communities

Prelude

Notes:

  • There were political, social and economic developments through the centuries.
  • This led to growth of towns, villages, arts, crafts and other activities.
  • Social changes and societies were not same everywhere due to various reasons.

Question 1.
On what basis was the society divided?
Answer:
Changes in Varna based Society:

  • In almost the entire subcontinent, society was already divided on the basis of varna.
  • These rules, prescribed by the Brahmanas, were accepted by the rulers of large kingdoms.
  • The differences between the high and low, and between the rich and poor, increased.
  • Under the Delhi Sultans and the Mughals, this hierarchy between social classes grew further.
  • With the growth of economy and the needs of society, people with new skills were required.
  • Smaller castes, or jatis, emerged within varnas.
  • New castes appeared amongst the Brahmanas.
  • Many tribes and social groups formed caste-based society and were given the status of jatis.
  • Specialised artisans like—smiths, carpenters and masons were also recognised as separate jatis by the Brahmanas.
  • Jatis, surpassed varna, and became the basis of society organisation.

Beyond Big Cities: Tribal Societies

Question 1.
Who were called the tribes?
Answer:
Many; societies did not follow the social rules and rituals prescribed by the Brahmanas. They were not divided into numerous unequal classes also, these groups were called tribes.

Question 2.
Give main features of the tribal societies.
Answer:
Main Features of the Tribal Societies:

  • Members of each tribe were united by kinship bonds.
  • Many tribes obtained their livebhood from agriculture.
  • Others were hunter-gatherers or herders.
  • Some tribes were nomadic and moved from one place to another.
  • A tribal group controlled land and pastures jointly, and divided these amongst households according to its own rules.
  • Many large tribes evolved in different parts of the subcontinent.
  • They usually lived in forests, hills, deserts and places difficult to reach.
  • Sometimes they clashed with the more powerful caste-based societies.
  • The tribes retained their freedom and preserved their separate culture.

Question 3.
What led to the change in societies?
Answer:
Caste-based and tribal societies depended on each other for their diverse needs. This relationship was one of conflict and dependence and so, this led to a change in society.

Who were Tribal People?

Question 1.
Why do we have scanty information about tribes?
Answer:
Tribal people were found in almost every region of the subcontinent. Contemporary historians and travellers give little information about the tribes because the tribal people did not keep written records.

They preserved their customs and oral traditions which were passed on from generation to generation and these were used to write their histories.

Question 2.
Which tribes inhabited North West and North East India? Write about them.
Answer:

  • Some powerful tribes controlled large territories.
  • In Punjab, the Khokhar tribe was very influential during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.
  • Afterwards the Gakkhars became more important.
  • Their chief, Kamal Khan Gakkhar, was made a noble (mansabdar) by Emperor Akbar.
  • In Multan and Sind, the Langahs and Arghuns dominated vast regions.
  • Afterwards they were defeated by the Mughals.
  • The Balochis were another large and powerful tribe in the north-west.
  • They were divided into many smaller clans under different chiefs.
  • In the western Himalaya there lived the shepherd tribe of Gaddis.
  • In the distant north-eastern part of the subcontinent the Nagas, Ahoms and many others lived.

Question 3.
What do you mean by “clan”? Give example.
Answer:
A clan is a group of families having a common ancestor. For example tribes were divided into different clans.

Question 4.
Describe the tribal groups of west and central India.
Answer:

  • In many areas of present-day Bihar and Jharkhand, Chero chiefdoms had emerged by the twelfth century.
  • They were not entirely subdued by the Mughals.
  • Under Aurangzeb, Mughal forces captured many chero fortresses and defeated the tribe.
  • The Mundas and Santhals were among the other important tribes that lived in Bihar and Jharkhand and also in Orissa and Bengal.
  • The Maharashtra highlands and Karnataka were home to Kolis, Berads and numerous others.
  • Kolis also lived in many areas of Gujarat.
  • Further South, Koragas, Vetars, Maravars and many others lived in large numbers.
  • Bhils were spread across Western and Central India.
  • By the late sixteenth century, many of them settled themselves as agriculturists and some even zamindars.
  • Many Bhil clans are still hunter gatherers.
  • The Gonds were found in great numbers across the present-day states of Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh.

Question 5.
Who were Cheros? How did they fight Mughals?
Answer:
Cheros were the tribes of present-day Bihar and Jharkhand. They were attacked and defeated by Raja Man Singh, the general during Akbar’s reign in 1591.

How Nomads and Mobile People Lived

Question 1.
How did nomads and mobile people live?
Answer:

  • Nomadic pastoralists moved over long distances with their animals.
  • They lived on milk and other pastoral products.
  • They also exchanged wool, ghee, etc., with settled agriculturists for grain, cloth, utensils and other products.
  • They bought and sold these goods as they moved from one place to another. They carried them on the back of their animals.

Question 2.
Who were nomads and Itinerant groups?
Answer:
Nomads are the wandering people. Most of them were pastoralists who moved from one pasture to another with their flock and herds of animals.

Itinerant groups, such as craftspersons, pedlars and entertainers travelled from one place to another practising their different professions.

Question 3.
Who were the Banjaras? Why were they important?
Answer:
Yes, the Banjaras were the most important nomadic traders and were important for the economy.

  • They were hired by merchants, they bought grain where it was cheaper and carried it to places where it was costlier.
  • From there they took something else for another place.
  • Alauddin Khalji used Banjaras to transport grains to city markets.
  • They found mention in the memoirs of Jahangir and were even used by Mughal army during campaigns.

Question 4.
Give an account of the life of Banjaras.
Answer:
The Life of Banjaras:
Peter Mundy, an English trader who came to India during the early seventeenth century, has described the Banjaras.

  • In the morning we met a tanda of Banjaras with 14,000 oxen.
  • They were all laden with grains such as wheat and rice.

These Banjaras carry their household, wives and children, along with them.

  • One tanda consists of many families.
  • Their way of life is similar to that of carriers who continuously travel from place to place.
  • They own their oxen. They are sometimes hired by merchants, but most commonly they are themselves merchants.
  • They buy grain where it is cheaply available and carry it to places where it is dearer.
  • From there, they again reload their oxen with anything that can be profitably sold in other places.

In a tanda there may be as many as 6 or 7 hundred persons.

  • They do not travel more than 6 or 7 miles a day that, too, in the cool weather.
  • After unloading their oxen, they turn them free to graze as there is enough land here, and no one is there to forbid them.

Question 5.
What occupations were followed by the pastoral tribes?
Answer:

  • Many pastoral tribes reared and sold animals like cattle and horses, to the prosperous people.
  • Different castes of petty pedlars.
  • Made and sold wares such as ropes, reeds, straw matting and coarse sacks. Mendicants acted as wandering merchants.
  • There were castes of entertainers who performed in different towns and villages for their livelihood.

Changing Society: New Castes and Hierarchies

Question 1.
How was varna based society changed?
Answer:
Changes in Varna based Society:

  • In almost the entire subcontinent, society was already divided on the basis of varna.
  • These rules, prescribed by the Brahmanas, were accepted by the rulers of large kingdoms.
  • The differences between the high and low, and between the rich and poor, increased.
  • Under the Delhi Sultans and the Mughals, this hierarchy between social classes grew further.
  • With the growth of economy and the needs of society, people with new skills were required.
  • Smaller castes, or jatis, emerged within varnas.
  • New castes appeared amongst the Brahmanas.
  • Many tribes and social groups formed caste-based society and were given the status of jatis.
  • Specialised artisans like—smiths, carpenters and masons were also recognised as separate jatis by the Brahmanas.
  • Jatis, surpassed varna, and became the basis of society organisation.

Question 2.
What was described in the 12th century inscription from Tiruchirapalli?
Answer:
The inscription from Tiruchirapalli describes the discussion on social status of rathakaras. The Brahmanas in a Sabha decided the occupations coming under the category of rathakaras.
It included architecture, building coaches/chariots, gateways for temples, sacrificial platforms and making mandapas etc.

Question 3.
Who became powerful among the Kshatriyas?
Answer:
Among the Kshatriyas, new Rajput clans became powerful. They belonged to different clems like Hunas, Chandelas, Chalukyas and others. Many of these came to be regarded as Rajputs and replaced the old rulers. These rulers used their wealth to create powerful states.

Question 4.
What other changes came with the rise of Rajputs?
Answer:
With the rise of Rajputs, many tribes became part of caste system with the help of Brahmanas. Only the leading tribes could join the ruling class. Majority of them joined lower jatis.

Many dominant tribes of Punjab, Sind and North-West Frontier adopted Islam and rejected the caste system. The unequal social order of orthodox Hinduism wasn’t acceptable to them.

A Closer look

The Gonds

Question 1.
Who were Gonds? What were their occupations?
Answer:
Gonds were the tribal group of Central India. They lived in a vast forested region called Gondwana—“country inhabited by Gonds”.

  • They were agriculturists; some of them practised shifting agriculture.
  • They were subdivided into smaller clans and each clan had its own Raja or Rai.
  • Gond kingdoms were beginning to become powerful at the time of decline of Delhi Sultanate. Akbar Nama mentions the Garha Katanga tribe covering 70,000 villages.

Question 2.
Discuss the administration of Gond State.
Answer:
The administrative system of Gond kingdom was centralized.

  • The kingdom was divided into Garhs. Each Garh was controlled by a Gond clan.
  • Garhs were further divided into units of 84 villages called chaurasi which were further subdivided into 12 villages called barhots.
  • The society was divided into unequal social classes. Brahmanas received land grants and became more influential.
  • The Gond chiefs wanted to be recognized as Rajputs so the Raja of Garha Katanga assumed the title of Sangram shah.
  • The mughals finally defeated the Gonds and annexed a part of kingdom.

Question 3.
How did Rani Durgawati die?
Answer:

  • Dalpat died early.
  • Rani Durgawati was very capable.
  • She started ruling on behalf of her five-year-old son, Bir Narain.
  • Under her, the kingdom became even more extensive.
  • In 1565, the Mughal forces under Asaf Khan attacked Garha Katanga.
  • Rani Durgawati put up a strong resistance.
  • She was defeated but preferred to die rather than surrender. Her son also died fighting soon after.

Question 4.
What led to the decline of Gonds?
Answer:
Gond state of Garha Katana was a rich state. They trapped and exported wild elephants. They were defeated by the Mughals who took a large amount of their wealth and kingdom.

Chandra Shah, uncle of Bir Narain was given the remaining kingdom. Despite their defeat, Gond kingdom survived for some time. Gradually they became weak and lost to stronger Marathas and Bundelas.

The Ahoms

Question 1.
Give an account of the Ahoms and their rule.
Answer:

  • The origin of the Ahoms is from Myanmar.
  • They migrated to the Brahmaputra valley from Burma (Myanmar) in the thirteenth century.
  • They created a new state by suppressing the older political system of the bhuiyans (landlords).
  • Dining the sixteenth century, they annexed the kingdoms of the chhutiyas (1523) and of Koch-Hajo (1581).
  • They also defeated many other tribes.
  • They built a large state, and for this they used fire-arms as early as the 1530s.
  • By the 1660s they could even make high quality gunpowder and cannons.

The Ahoms faced many invasions from the south-west:

  • In 1662, the Mughals under Mir Jumla attacked the Ahom kingdom.
  • Despite their brave defence, the Ahoms were defeated.
  • The direct Mughal control over the region was established but it did not last long.

Question 2.
What do we mean by ‘Paiks and bhuiyans’?
Answer:
Paiks were the labourers who were forced to work in Ahom state. Bhuiyans were the landlords.

Question 3.
Briefly Write about the administration of Ahom State.
Ans.
Administration of Ahoms:

  • The Ahom state depended upon forced labour.
  •  The forced workers were called paiks.
  • A census of the population was taken.
  • Each village had to send a number of paiks by rotation.
  • People from heavily populated areas were shifted to less populated places.
  • Ahom clans were thus broken up.
  • By the first half of the seventeenth century the administration became quite centralised.

Question 4.
Explain the Ahom society.
Answer:

  • Almost all adult males served in the army during war.
  • They were also engaged in building dams, irrigation systems and other public works.
  • The Ahoms also introduced new method of rice cultivation.
  • Ahom society was divided into clans or khels.
  • There were very few castes of artisans, so they came from the adjoining kingdoms.
  • A khel often controlled several villages.
  • The peasant was given land by his village community.
  • Even the king could not take it away without the community’s consent.
  • In the beginning the Ahoms worshipped their own tribal gods.

During the first half of the seventeenth century, they were influenced by Briahmanas.

  • Temples and Brahmanas were granted land by the king.
  • In the reign of Sib Singh (1714-1744), Hinduism became their major religion.
  • The Ahom kings did not completely give up their traditional beliefs after adopting Hinduism.

Ahom society was very sophisticated.

  • Poets and scholars were given land grants.
  • Theatre was encouraged.
  • Important works of Sanskrit were translated into the local languages.
  • Historical works, known as buranjis, were also written-first in the Ahom language and then in Assamese.

Conclusion

Question 1.
What were the effects of social changes taking place in the sub continent?
Answer:
There were mainy changes in the society :

  • Varna based and tribal groups interacted with each other and adapted and changed.
  • Tribes took up different livelihoods and later even merged with caste based society.
  • Some rejected both-caste and orthodox Hinduism.
  • Some tribes had organised administration and became politically powerful.
  • They had conflicts with other powerful kingdoms.

Multiple Choice Questions

Prelude

Question 1.
Who prescribed the ‘Varna’ rules?
(a) Rulers
(b) Jatis
(c) Brahmanas
(d) No one
Answer:
Brahmanas

Beyond Big Cities: Tribal Societies

Question 1.
Tribals obtained their livelihood from:
(a) Hunting
(b) Agriculture
(c) Herding
(d) All of these
Answer:
All of these

Who were Tribal People?

Question 1.
Which tribe was influential in Punjab in 13th and 14th centuries?
(a) Khokhar
(b) Ahoms
(c) Gonds
(d) Baiyaras
Answer:
Khokhar

Question 2.
Which tribal group established a powerful kingdom in Assam?
(a) Khokhar
(b) Ahoms
(c) Gonds
(d) Banjaras
Answer:
Ahoms

Question 3.
The important tribe of Bihar is
(a) Mundas
(b) Ahoms
(c) Khokhar
(d) Gonds
Answer:
Mundas

How Nomads and Mobile People Lived

Question 1.
Who used the services of Banjaras as trading nomads?
(a) Alauddin Khalji
(b) Jahangir
(c) Both of these
(d) None
Answer:
Both of these

Changing Society: New Castes and Hierarchies

Question 1.
Who were known as the rathakaras?
(a) Chariot makers
(b) Soldiers
(c) Brahmanas
(d) Carpenters
Answer:
Chariot makers

A Closer look

The Gonds

Question 1.
How many units of villages were called chaurasi?
(a) 80
(b) 84
(c) 14
(d) 24
Answer:
84

Question 2.
A division of Gond kingdoms controlled by a particular clan was termed as
(a) tanda
(b) clan
(c) garh
(d) khel
Answer:
garh

Question 3.
The main occupation of Gond tribes was
(a) trade
(b) agriculture
(c) goldsmith
(d) blacksmith
Answer:
agriculture

Question 4.
Who was Bir Narain?
(a) Ruler of Sind
(b) Ruler of Punjab
(c) Son of Rani Durgawati
(d) None of these
Answer:
Son of Rani Durgawati

The Ahoms

Question 1.
The Ahom tribes migrated from
(a) Iran
(b) Arab
(c) Myanmar (Burma)
(d) China
Answer:
Myanmar (Burma)

Question 2.
Paik are
(a) the landlords
(b) the forced labourers
(c) people wandering from one place to another
(d) clan in the Ahom society
Answer:
the forced labourers

Objective Type Questions

Question 1.
Fill in the blanks with appropriate words:
1. The society was divided according to the rules of ……………..
2. A large number of …………………….. were found in the present day state of Chhattisgarh.
3. Nomadic pastoralists got the things they needed through …………………….. system.
4. The Cheros were defeated by in ……………………. 1591.
5. ………………… the chief of the Gakkhars was made a noble by Akbar.
6. Historical works called Buranjis were written in …………………….. and Ahom language.
Answer:
1. vama
2. Gonds
3. barter
4. Raja Mem Singh
5. Kamal Khan Gakkar
6. Assamese

Question 2.
State whether the given statements are true or false:
1. Tribes were not divided into numerous unequal classes.
2. Most of the tribes kept written records.
3. Banjara-caravans were called Tanda.
4. Akbar Nama mentions the Gond kingdom of Garha Katanga that had 70,000 villages.
5. Rani Durgawati of Garha Katanga was widow of Sangram Shah.
6. Ahom society was divided into clans/khels.
Answer:
1. True
2. False
3. True
4. True
5. False
6. True.

Question 3.
Match the contents of Column A with that of Column B:
Tribes, Nomads and Settled Communities Class 7 Extra Questions History Chapter 7 - 1
Answer:
1. (d)
2. (e)
3. (c)
4. (a)
5. (b)

Extra Questions for Class 7 Social Science