History Easy To Learn Grade 10. 2023-24
History Easy To Learn Grade 10. 2023-24
History Easy To Learn Grade 10. 2023-24
EASY TO LEARN
In 1848, Frederic Sorrieu, a French artist prepared a series of four print visualising his dream of world –
’democratic and social republic’.
A long train of people marching towards the Statue of Liberty, offering homage.
Above we can see Christ and angels also giving their blessings for the fulfillment of their vision and
spreading the feeling of fraternity,
on the earth in the foreground lie the shattered remains of the symbol of absolutists institutions.
Leading the procession are the USA and Switzerland (already nation states) followed by France.
The people of Germany carrying black, red and gold flag, who yet did not exist as nation state.
IMPORTANT TERMS
Absolutist – Literally, a government or system of rule that has no restraints on the power
exercised. In history, the term refers to a form of monarchical government that was centralised,
militarised and repressive
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Plebiscite – A direct vote by which all the people of a region are asked to accept or reject a
proposal
Feminist – Awareness of women’s rights and interests based on the belief of the social,
economic and political equality of the gender.
Napoleon
In1799, Napoleon seized political power.
He gave the Civil Code of 1804 also known as Napoleonic
Code.
It envisaged:
Equality before law.
Right to property.
Abolishment of all privileges based on birth rights
Napoleonic Code or Civil Code of 1804
Simplification of administrative law.
Uniform laws, standardized weights and measures and a common national
currency.
Removed restrictions on guilds in towns.
Abolishment of feudal system and serfdom.
Freed the peasants from manorial dues.
Improvement in transport and communications.
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The new administrative arrangements did not go hand in
hand with political freedom
o Increased taxes.
o Censorship.
o Forced to join French army.
Prussia, Russia, Austria and Britain, the collectively defeated Napoleon in the Battle
of Waterloo in 1815,
restored the Bourbon dynasty.
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The making of Nationalism in Europe
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o Till the mid 18 century, no nation-states in Europe.
o Germany, Italy, and Switzerland all divided into duchies, kingdoms, and cantons.
o Eastern Europe and Central Europe-autocratic rulers.
THE HAPSBURG EMPIRE-(A Patchwork Empire)
Ruled over Austria-Hungary-a patchwork of different regions and people,
It included –the Tyrols, Austria and Sudetenland- Bohemia –aristocracy German
speaking
It also included Italian speaking provinces-Lombardy and Venetia.
Included mass of subject peasant people. The only binding tie was the common
allegiance to the emperor.
Aristocracy
Aristocracy
The land-owning class.
Numerically small, but dominated Europe, both socially and politically.
Spoke French which was considered the language of the high society.
Families were connected through marriage.
Peasantry
Tenants and small landowners who worked as serfs.
Cultivated the lands of the aristocratic lords.
The New Middle Class
Besides the aristocracy and the peasantry a new class emerged in the Western and
Central Europe due to the development- industrial growth.
Comprised of industrialists, businessmen, Professionals and educated liberal middle
class.
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Though their number was small till 19 century but their ideas of national unity and
abolition of aristocratic privileges gained popularity.
LIBERAL NATIONALISM
The term liberalism derived from the Latin word’ liber’, meaning free.
The new middle class in fact demanded
Political Liberalism:
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equality of all before the law .
freedom for the individuals.
Not against the private property
Government by consent.[Representative government through parliament and a
constitution.]
Revolutionary France –right to vote and get elected exclusively to property owning men.
Men without property and all women excluded from political rights.
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Sothroughout 19 and 20 century women and non-propertied men organised opposition
movements demanding equal political rights.
Economic Liberalism
Stood for freedom of markets and the abolition of state-imposed restrictions on the
movement of goods and capital.
In German speaking regions during Napolean’s rule,there were 39 states each of it
possessed its own currency and weights and measures...creating lot of problems.
CONGRESS OF VIENNA
Austria got control of Northern Italy.
German confederation of 39 states remained untouched.
Russia given a part of Poland, Prussia was given a part of Saxony.
Main objective of Congress of Vienna: To restore the monarchies ,create a new
conservative order in Europe.
CONSERVATIVE REGIMES
Established autocracies.
Did not tolerate dissent and criticism.
Censorship laws to curb the news.
Curb activities which questioned legitimacy of autocratic government.
So, one of the foremost issues taken up by the liberal-nationalists-Freedom of press.
The Revolutionaries
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The years following 1815-fear of repression, many liberal –nationalists underground.
Secret societies sprang up in many parts of Europe to train revolutionaries to oppose
monarchy.
To fight for liberty and freedom-Importance of nation-states in the freedom struggle.
Giuseppe Mazzini
An Italian revolutionary.
Born in Genoa in 1807,member of the secret society-Carbonari.
Exiled in 1831 for attempting a revolution in Liguria.
Founded Young Italy in Marseilles &Young Europe in Berne.
Believed that God had intended nations to be the natural unit of mankind
So Italy could not continue as a patchwork of small states and kingdoms. It had to be
forged into a single unified republic.
His opposition to monarchy and his vision of democratic republic frightened the
conservatives.
Metternich described him as ’the most dangerous enemy of our social order’.
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July Revolution
The Bourborn dynasty overthrown.
Constitutional monarchy set up under Louis Philippe at its head.
Metternich once remarked ’When France sneezes the rest of Europe catches cold.’
REVOLUTION OF BRUSSELS
The July revolution sparked an uprising in Brussels which led Belgium breaking away
from the United Kingdom of the Netherlands.
Language :
Language too played an important role in developing nationalist sentiments.
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After the Russian occupation, the Polish language was forced out of schools and the
Russian language was imposed.
1831 an armed rebellion against the Russian, suppressed.
Now language used as a weapon of national resistance.
Polish used for church gatherings and all religious instructions.
Many priest and bishop punished and banished also.
So the use of Polish, seen as a symbol of struggle against Russian dominance.
Grimm brothers(Jacob and Wilhelm Grim):
born in Hanau, a German city, wrote 'Fairy Tales' which became popular
among children and adults.
Encouraged the feelings of the people to achieve freedom of the press.
The Grimm brothers tried to oppose French domination that was a danger
to German culture.
They did a lot of work for the development of German language and
creation of German Nationality in reference to identity.
They also published a 33 volume dictionary of German language which was
also a wider effort to oppose French domination.
SILESIAN UPRISING
1845-Weavers revolted against the contractors who supplied raw material and gave the
orders to finish textiles because of less payments.
4 June at 2 p.m ----a large crowd of weavers marched to the mansion of the contractors
demanding high wages.
Damaging the property, contractor fled with his family to a neighbouring village which however
refused to give shelter.
He returned 24 hours later, called the army ,eleven weavers shot.
FRANKFURT PARLIAMENT
IN GERMANY:
Political associations of middle classes came together in the city of Frankfurt and
voted for all-GERMAN NATIONAL ASSEMBLY.
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18 MAY 1848- 831 elected representatives took their place in the Frankfurt parliament
convened in the church of St.Paul.
Drafted a constitution for a German nation, headed by a constitutional monarchy.
The crown was offered to Fredrich Wilhelm IV ,King of Prussia, he rejected it.
Opposition of aristocracy and military increased.
Parliament dominated by the middle classes, resisted the demands of the workers
soon lost the support .
Women were denied the political rights.
Women admitted just as observers in the visitors’ gallery.
Liberal suppressed by the Conservatives, however the old order of
monarchy understood ,that changes required now:
Serfdom and bonded labour abolished.
The Hapsburg rulers granted more freedom to the Hungarians in1867.
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GERMAN UNIFICATION
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UNIFICATION OF ITALY
Architects of Italian Unification:
Giuseppe Mazzini----Young Italy(Marseilles) and Young Europe(Berne)-Soul
Count Camillo de Cavour---- Prime Minister - Led to unification.
Giuseppe Garibaldi---also known as Bismarck of Italy-Formed armed volunteers.
Victor Emmanuel II- Proclaimed king of Italy.
PROCESS OF UNIFICATION
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Political Fragmentation-Italy also fragmented like Germany.
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During the middle of 19 century it was divided into 7 states, of which only Sardinia-
Piedmont ruled by an Italian prince.
North----Austrian Hapsburg.
Centre----Pope.
Southern regions----Bourborn kings of Spain.
Regional languages spoken.
1830-Mazzini made efforts to unite Italian Republic, formed secret societies like Young
Italy to achieve his goal.
Process
Cavour who was the chief minister led the movement to unify Italy.
He formed a tactful alliance with France ,Sardinia-Piedmont and defeated Austrian forces
in 1859.
Garibaldi also joined with huge armed forces.
In 1860 marched into South Italy and the kingdom of Two Sicilies and succeeded in
driving out the Spanish rulers.
1861-Victor Emmanuel proclaimed the king of united Italy.
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UNIFICATION OF BRITAIN
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No British nation before the 18 century.
The British Isles comprised of English, Welsh, Scot and Irish ethnic groups.
Due to industrialisation ,concentration of wealth English dominated other groups.
National symbols like English language, British flag and National Anthem were promoted.
Unlike French revolution, in Britain was the result of long drawn dissatisfaction amongst
the ethnic groups.
Britain achieved this by Parliamentary Acts.
THE ACT OF UNION - 1707
The English Parliament seized power from monarchy in 1688(Glorious Revolution).
1707 –Act of Union formed by SCOTLAND AND ENGLAND, resulted in the formation of
the ‘UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN’
Meant that (England + Scotland) England was able to impose its influence on Scotland.
However, the Scottish culture and political institution was suppressed.
Ireland too suffered the same fate,
Deeply divided between Catholics and Protestants.
The English helped the Protestants of Ireland
Catholic revolts against British dominance were suppressed.
1798- a failed revolt led by Wolfe Tone and his United Irishmen
incorporated into the United Kingdom in 1801.
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VISUALISING THE NATION
ALLEGORY- When an abstract idea (like greed, envy, love ,nation)is expressed through a
person or a thing. An allegorical story has two meanings one literal and one symbolic.
Nations portrayed as female figures.
Personification- did not stand for any particular woman in real life.
E.g during the French Revolution artists used the female allegory to show LIBERTY,
EQUALITY AND FRATERNITY.
Marianne
• A popular Christian name
• The idea of a people’s nation.
• Her characteristics were drawn from those of Liberty and the Republic
• Statues of Marianne -to remind the public of the national symbol of unity
• Marianne images were marked on coins and stamps.
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Germania
Germania became the allegory of the German nation
Germania wears a crown of oak leaves
The German oak stands for heroism.
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NATIONALISM AND IMPERIALISM
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By the end of the 19 century the feeling of Nationalism started changing into
Imperialism.
Imperialism-The policy of expanding countries power by military or any other means is
known as Imperialism.
The most serious nationalist tension in Europe after 1871 was the area called Balkans.
Balkan tension
BALKANS(Slavs)-region of geographical and ethnic diversities.
Comprised of---Romania, Bulgaria, Albania, Greece, Macedonia, Croatia, Bosnia-
Herzegovina, Slovenia, Serbia and Montenegro.
These all were under the control of Ottoman Empire.
However ,with the weakening of the Ottoman Empire all these nationalities started
declaring themselves independent,
but this region of Balkan became a source of intense rivalries and jealousies.
At the same time intense rivalry between the great European powers for trade and
colonies as well as naval and military might.
This led these powers –Russia, Germany, England and Austria-Hungary to jump in the
Balkan problems thus flaring the entire situation in the
First World War.
Thus Nationalism with Imperialism led Europe to disaster in 1914.
Anti-imperial movements developed and many colonies declared themselves
independent .
IMPORTANT YEARS
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1688- British parliament seizes power from the monarchy 1707 Act of Union between Scotland
and England
1785& 1786 - Grimm Brothers Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm were born
1789 - The first clear expression of nationalism came with the French Revolution 1797
Napoleon invades Italy; Napoleonic wars begin
1804 - Civil Code or Napoleonic Code removed all privileges based on birth & established
equality
1807 - Italian revolutionary Giuseppe Mazzini was born
1812 - Grimm brothers published their first collection of tales
1813 - Napoleon lost the battle of Leipzig
1814- 1815 - Fall of Napoleon; the Vienna Peace Settlement
1815- The defeat of Napoleon by Britain, Russia, Prussia and Austria 1821 Greek struggle for
independence begins
1821- Nationalism sparked off amongst the Greeks
1824 - English poet Lord Byron died of fever
1824 - Massacre at Chios, Eugene Delacroix
July 1830 - The first upheaval took place in France
1831 - Giuseppe Mazzini was sent to exile for attempting a revolution in Liguria
1831 = An armed rebellion took place against Russian rule
1832 - Treaty of Constantinople recognised Greece as an independent nation
833 - The founding of Young Europe in Berne
1834 - A Customs Union or Zollverein was formed at the initiative of Prussia
1845 Weavers in Silesia led a revolt against contractors
1848 - French artist named Frédéric Sorrieu prepared a series of four prints visualising
‘Democratic and social Republics’ Revolutions in Europe; artisans, industrial workers and
peasants revolt against economic hardships; middle classes demand constitutions and
representative governments; Italians, Germans, Magyars, Poles, Czechs, etc. demand nation-
states
18 May 1848- 831 elected representatives marched in a festive procession to take their places
in the Frankfurt parliament
1859 - Tactful diplomatic alliance with France engineered by Cavour, Sardinia-Piedmont
succeeded in defeating the Austrian forces
1859- 1870 – Unification of Italy
1861 - Victor Emmanuel II was proclaimed king of united Italy Unification of Germany
1866- 1871 - Unification of Germany
1867 - Habsburg rulers granted more autonomy to the Hungarians
January 1871 - Prussian king, William I, was proclaimed German Emperor in a ceremony held
at Versailles
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The Idea of Satyagraha
The idea of satyagraha emphasized the power of truth and the need to search for truth.
The struggle was against injustice,
then physical force was not necessary to fight the oppressor.
A satyagrahi could win the battle through nonviolence.
Forced to accept the truth through the use of violence.
Non-cooperation movement:
At the Congress session at Nagpur in December 1920, the Non-Cooperation program
was adopted.
It should begin with the surrender of titles that the government awarded,
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and a boycott of civil services, army, police, courts and legislative councils, schools, and
foreign goods.
Non-Cooperation-Khilafat Movement began in January 1921.
All of them responded to the call of Swaraj,
but the term meant different things to different people.
Reason: Gandhiji relaunched the Civil Disobedience Movement after the Second Round
Table Conference
1. Back in India, he discovered that the government had begun a new cycle of
repression.
2. Ghaffar Khan and Jawaharlal Nehru were both in jail
3. The Congress had been declared illegal.
4. A series of measures had been imposed to prevent meetings, demonstrations,
and boycotts.
The reasons for the participation of various social classes and groups in the Civil
Disobedience Movement
1. Rich peasants:
Rich peasant communities like the Patidars of Gujarat & the Jats of Uttar Pradesh
joined the movement
because being producers of commercial crops
they were hard hit by the trade depression and falling prices.
The refusal of the government to reduce the revenue demand made them fight against
high revenues.
2. Poor peasants:
Joined the movement because they found it difficult to pay rent.
They wanted the unpaid rent to the landlord to be remitted.
3. Business class:
They reacted against colonial policies that restricted activities
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because they were keen on expanding their business and for this,
they wanted protection against imports of foreign goods.
They thought that Swaraj would cancel colonial restrictions and that trade would
flourish without restrictions.
They also wanted protection against the rupee-sterling foreign exchange ratio.
They formed the Indian Industrial and Commercial Congress in 1920
and the Federation of the Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industries (FICCI) in
1927.
5. Women:
There was large-scale participation of women in the movement.
They participated in protest marches, manufactured salt,
and picketed foreign cloth and liquor shops.
Many went to jail.
Reason: Some of the Muslim political organizations in India were lukewarm(not showing
interest) in their response to the Civil Disobedience Movement:
The decline of Khilafat and Non-Cooperation movements led to the alienation of Muslims
from Congress.
From the mid-1920s, the Congress was seen to be visibly associated with Hindu
nationalist groups like the Hindu Mahasabha.
Relations between Hindus and Muslims worsened and communal riots took place.
The Muslim League gained prominence with its claim of representing Muslims and
demanding a separate electorate for them.
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when art and architecture, science and mathematics, religion and culture, law and
philosophy, and crafts and trade flourished.
These nationalist histories urged the readers to take pride in India’s great achievements in
the past
and struggle to change the miserable conditions of life under British rule.
Revolutionaries(HSRA)
Many nationalists thought that the struggle against the British could not be won through
non-violence.
In 1928, the Hindustan Socialist Republican Army (HSRA) was founded
Its leaders were Bhagat Singh, Jatin Das and Ajoy Ghosh.
In a series of dramatic actions in different parts of India,
the HSRA targeted some of the symbols of British power.
In April 1929, Bhagat Singh and Dutta threw a bomb in the Legislative Assembly.
In the same year there was an attempt to blow up the train that Lord Irwin was travelling
in.
Bhagat Singh
Bhagat Singh was 23 when he was tried and executed by the colonial government.
During his trial, Bhagat Singh stated that he did not wish to glorify ‘the cult of the bomb
and pistol’ but wanted a revolution in society:
“Revolution is the inalienable right of mankind.
Freedom is the imprescriptible birth right of all.
We await the advent of revolution. Inquilab Zindabad!”
Important Years:
January 1915- Mahatma Gandhi returned to India from South Africa
1917- Champaran and Kheda satyagraha
1918- Ahmedabad Mill Strike
1919- Gandhiji launched satyagraha against the Rowlatt Act
13 April 1919- Jallianwala Bagh incident
March 1919- Khilafat Committee formed
September 1920- Gandhiji convinced Congress for a non-cooperation movement
December 1920- Non-Cooperation program was adopted by Congress in Nagpur
January 1921- Non-Cooperation-Khilafat Movement began
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October 1920- Oudh Kisan Sabha
6 January 1921- Police firing at peasants in Rae Bareli
1920- The militant guerrilla movement spread in Gudem Hills, Andhra Pradesh
1922- Chauri Chaura violence
11 February 1922- Gandhiji decided to withdraw the Non-Cooperation Movement
1928- “Go Back Simon” movement
Nov 1930 – Jan 1931- First Round Table Conference
Sept-Dec 1931- Second Round Table Conference
Nov – Dec 1932- Third Round Table Conference
December 1929- The “Purna Swaraj” was formalized
26 January 1930- Declared to be celebrated as the Independence Day, but got very little attention
31 January 1930- Gandhiji sent a letter of Viceroy Irwin stating 11 demands
12 March 1930- Salt March or Dandi March or Dandi Satyagraha or Civil Disobedience Movement started
6 April 1930- Salt March ended
April 1930- Abdul Ghaffar Khan got arrested
May 1930- Mahatma Gandhi got arrested
5 March 1931- Gandhi-Irwin Pact
23 March 1931- Bhagat Singh, Rajguru and Sukhdev were sentenced to death
December 1931- Gandhiji went to London for a conference but returned disappointed
26 September 1932- Poona Pact
Jan 1932- Civil Disobedience Movement started again
1920- Indian Industrial and Commercial Congress
1927- Federation of the Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industries (FICCI)
1906- Muslim League established
1928- Death of Lala Lajpat Rai
1935- The government of India Act
8 August 1942- Quit India movement launched
Globalization
Globalization is a long-term process, not just a recent phenomenon.
Trade, migration, the movement of capital, and the spread of ideas
and diseases have all contributed to globalization.
Evidence of globalization can be found as far back as 3000 BCE.
Cowries from the Maldives were used as currency in China
and East Africa for over a millennium.
The long-distance spread of disease-carrying germs can be traced back to the seventh
century.
By the thirteenth century, globalization was an unmistakable link between different parts
of the world.
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The silk routes are a good example of vibrant pre-modern trade and cultural links between
distant parts of the world:
Historians have identified several silk routes over land
and by sea connecting vast regions of Asia with Europe and northern Africa.
The name ‘silk routes’ points out the importance of West-bound Chinese silk cargoes
along this route.
Chinese pottery also travelled the same route,
as did textiles and spices from India and Southeast Asia.
In return, precious metals (gold and silver) flowed from Europe to Asia.
Early Christian missionaries and Muslim preachers travelled this route to Asia.
Buddhism from Eastern India spread in several directions through intersecting points on
the silk routes.
Sometimes the new crops could make the difference between life and death:
Europe’s poor began to eat better
and live longer with the introduction of the humble potato.
Ireland’s poorest peasants became so dependent on potatoes
that when disease destroyed the potato crop in the mid-1840s,
hundreds of thousands died of starvation.
Print in Japan :
Buddhist missionaries of China introduced hand -printing technology into Japan around AD 768-
770.
The oldest Japanese book printed in AD 868 is the Buddhist ‘Diamond Sutra’.
The late 18th C Urban circles at Edo (Tokyo)
Illustrated collections of paintings depicted -urban culture, involving artists, courtesans, and
teahouse gatherings.
Kitagawa Utamaro:
Born in Edo(Tokyo) in 1753,
It was widely known for his contributions to an art form called ukiyo (‘pictures of the floating world’)
or depiction of ordinary human experiences, especially urban ones.
Reasons for the arrival of wood block printing in Europe after 1295:
Wood Block Printing came to Europe after 1295 because:
This technique was with China first.
Marco Polo returned to Italy and brought this knowledge with himself.
Now Italian began producing books with Wood Block.
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Soon the technology spread in other parts of world.
Limitations of manuscripts:
Manuscripts were highly expensive and fragile.
They have to be handle carefully.
They could not be read easily.
Reasons Why Couldn’t the production of handwritten manuscripts satisfy the ever increasing
demand for books:
Copying was an expensive, laborious and time consuming business.
Manuscripts were fragile and difficult to handle.
Not easily carried around or read easily.
Gutenberg:
Gutenberg was the son of a merchant and grew up on a large agricultural estate.
From his childhood he had seen wine and olive presses.
Subsequently he learnt the art of polishing stones became a master goldsmith
and also acquired the expertise to create lead moulds used for making trinkets.
Drawing on this knowledge he used to design his new innovation.
Print did not directly shape their minds, but it did open up the possibility of thinking
differently.
• There can be no doubt that print helps the spread of ideas.
• People did not read just one kind of literature.
• People Read the ideas of Voltaire and Rousseau
• People Read monarchical and Church propaganda also
• They were not influenced directly by everything
• They read or saw.
• They accepted some ideas and rejected others.
• They interpreted things their own way.
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19th Centaury:
Children
• Late 19th C- Primary education became compulsory
• Children became an important category of readers.
• Production of school textbooks became critical for the publishing industry.
• A children’s press was set up in France in 1857.
• Published new works as well as old fairy tales and folk tales.
• The Grimm Brothers in Germany(1812) – Published rural folk tales of children version.
• Print recorded old tales but also changed them.
Women:
• Women became readers as well as writers.
• Penny magazines were especially meant for women
• Teaching proper behaviour and housekeeping.
• Novels(19th C)-women were seen as important readers.
• Novelists were women: Jane Austen, the Bronte sisters, George Eliot.
• Their writings became important in defining a new type of woman:
a person with will, strength of personality, determination and the power to think.
Workers, artisans and lower-middle-class people
• Lending libraries in England became instruments for educating white-collar workers,
artisans and lower-middle-class people.
• Sometimes, self-educated working-class people wrote for themselves.
• After the working day was gradually shortened from the mid-nineteenth century,
• workers had some time for self-improvement and self-expression.
• They wrote political tracts and autobiographies in large numbers.
Even though pre-colonial Bengal had developed an extensive network of village primary schools,
students very often did not read text.
They only learnt to write.
Teachers dictated portions of texts from memory and students wrote them down.
Many of them became literate without ever actually reading any kind of texts.
From the early nineteenth century, there were intense debates around religious issues.
Different groups offered a variety of new interpretations of the beliefs of different religions.
Ram Mohan Roy published the Sambad Kaumudi from 1821
and the orthodoxy commissioned the Samachar Chandrika to oppose his opinion.
From 1822, two Persian newspapers: Jam-i-Jahan Noma and Shamsul Akhbar were
published.
The Deoband Seminary, founded in 1867 published thousands upon thousands of fatwas
telling Muslim readers how to conduct themselves in everyday lives
and explaining the meaning of Islamic doctrines.
The first printed edition of the Ramcharitmanas of Tulsidas, a sixteenth-century text, came out
from Calcutta in 1810.
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Kashibaba, a Kanpur Mill worker, wrote and published Chote aur Bade ka Saval in 1938 to show
the links between caste and class exploitation.
How did printing work to connect communities and people living in different part of India?
It created new platform for expression of ideas.
It is the cheapest and most simplest way of communication.
It brought about the problems of Indian Masses.
A large number of religious book were being transmitted to Indian Masses.
The role of print culture in encouraging the role of Nationalism in India:
Despite repression nationalist newspaper were reaching every nook and corner of the country.
They brought to light the misrule of the British.
Revolutionary Bal Gangadhar Tilak started the newspaper named Kesari.
Bal Gangadhar Tilak was imprisoned in 1908 which led to widespread protest all over India.
New Words:
Calligraphy: The art of beautiful and stylised writing is called Calligraphy.
Vellum: A parchment made from the skin of animals.
Manuscripts: Manuscripts were copied on palm leaves or on handmade paper.
Platen: It is a board which is pressed onto the back of paper to get the impression from the type.
Ballad: A historical account or folk tale in verse, usually sung or recited.
Taverns: Places where people gathered to drink alcohol, to be served food, and to meet friends
and exchange news.
Ulama: Legal scholars of Islam and the sharia (a body of Islamic law)
Fatwa: A legal pronouncement on Islamic law usually given by a mufti (legal scholar) to clarify
issues on which the law is uncertain.
Protestant Reformation:
A sixteenth-century movement to reform the Catholic Church dominated by Rome.
Martin Luther was one of the main Protestant reformers.
Several traditions of anti-Catholic Christianity developed out of the movement.
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