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  • Important Questions for Ruling the Countryside MCQs for Class 8 History
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Ruling the Countryside MCQs — Free Class 8 History Chapter 3 Practice
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Ruling the Countryside MCQs — Free Class 8 History Chapter 3 Practice

By rohit.pandey1

|

Updated on 12 Sep 2025, 16:34 IST

Ruling the Countryside MCQs—Here is a compilation of free, chapter-wise practice for NCERT Class 8 History (Our Pasts–III) Chapter 3. The sets follow the latest CBSE Board competency-based pattern and include answers, brief explanations, and a complete answer key so you can revise quickly. 

This chapter’s Class 8 History Chapter 3 MCQs cover all high-yield areas: the Permanent Settlement (1793, Lord Cornwallis) with zamindars, fixed revenue and auction of estates; Ryotwari under Thomas Munro with direct settlement to ryots; Mahalwari (1822, Holt Mackenzie) assessed on the mahal (village/estate); and Indigo cultivation—the nij and ryoti systems, planter advances (taccavi/avans), low prices, and peasant indebtedness. You’ll also practice key events from the Indigo Revolt/Blue Rebellion (1859–60), the Indigo Commission (1860), and contextual references like Dinabandhu Mitra’s Nil Darpan, along with the wider impact of revenue demand on agriculture and rural society.

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Start with the Ruling the Countryside online quiz, then save the MCQ PDF download for offline practice. This focused question bank of CBSE Class 8 History MCQs Ch 3 brings together objective questions, important questions, and a clean worksheet with answer key, giving you everything needed to master NCERT Class 8 History—Ruling the Countryside.

Important Questions for Ruling the Countryside MCQs for Class 8 History

Permanent Settlement (1793) was introduced by:
(a) Lord Wellesley
(b) Lord Cornwallis
(c) Warren Hastings
(d) Lord Dalhousie
Answer: (b)

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Under Permanent Settlement, revenue was fixed:
(a) Annually
(b) For ten years
(c) Permanently
(d) Every harvest
Answer: (c)

In Permanent Settlement, the key intermediaries were:
(a) Ryots
(b) Zamindars
(c) Jagirdars
(d) Talukdars
Answer: (b)

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If zamindars failed to pay revenue on time, their estates could be:
(a) Granted remission
(b) Given to ryots
(c) Auctioned
(d) Converted to crown land
Answer: (c)

The Ryotwari system made revenue settlements directly with the:
(a) Zamindar
(b) Mahal
(c) Ryot (cultivator)
(d) Banker
Answer: (c)

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Ryotwari is most closely associated with administrator:
(a) Holt Mackenzie
(b) Thomas Munro
(c) Charles Metcalfe
(d) Mountstuart Elphinstone
Answer: (b)

The Mahalwari settlement assessed revenue at the level of the:
(a) Individual field
(b) District
(c) Mahal (village/estate)
(d) Province
Answer: (c)

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Mahalwari assessment was systematised under:
(a) Holt Mackenzie
(b) Lord Cornwallis
(c) Robert Clive
(d) Lord Canning
Answer: (a)

Indigo cultivation by planters on their own land was called:
(a) Ryoti
(b) Nij
(c) Taccavi
(d) Ijara
Answer: (b)

When peasants grew indigo on their fields under advances/contracts, it was the:
(a) Nij system
(b) Mahalwari system
(c) Ryoti system
(d) Ryotwari system
Answer: (c)

Money advanced to peasants for indigo cultivation was commonly called:
(a) Dastak
(b) Avans/Taccavi
(c) Zar-i-zamin
(d) Diwani
Answer: (b)

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Planters preferred alluvial soils of Bengal/Bihar for indigo mainly because:
(a) They needed less labour
(b) Indigo grows well in such soils
(c) Taxes were lower there
(d) Rainfall was irrelevant
Answer: (b)

A major problem peasants faced with indigo was that it:
(a) Restored soil fertility
(b) Needed no irrigation
(c) Exhausted soil and reduced food-crop acreage
(d) Was harvested round the year
Answer: (c)

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The Indigo Revolt (Blue Rebellion) took place in:
(a) 1848–49
(b) 1859–60
(c) 1869–70
(d) 1885–86
Answer: (b)

Following the revolt, the colonial state set up the:
(a) Indigo Commission (1860)
(b) Bengal Board of Revenue (1865)
(c) Deccan Commission (1875)
(d) Famine Commission (1880)
Answer: (a)

In many areas after 1860, peasants increasingly shifted from indigo to:
(a) Cotton
(b) Jute
(c) Tea
(d) Tobacco
Answer: (b)

The book/drama that highlighted indigo peasant distress was:
(a) Anandamath
(b) Nil Darpan
(c) Hind Swaraj
(d) Gitanjali
Answer: (b)

A key risk of the fixed-revenue demand in Permanent Settlement was:
(a) Incentive for zamindars to invest in improvement
(b) Government bore all monsoon risk
(c) Zamindars faced rigid dues even in bad harvests
(d) Revenue automatically fell in drought years
Answer: (c)

One intended advantage of Mahalwari over Permanent Settlement was:
(a) No surveys needed
(b) Flexible revision of revenue assessments
(c) Abolition of all intermediaries
(d) Payment in kind only
Answer: (b)

A common reason for peasant indebtedness under indigo contracts was:
(a) High procurement prices
(b) Advances tied to compulsory indigo acreage
(c) Free choice of crop
(d) State subsidies for food grains
Answer: (b)

Permanent Settlement (1793) was introduced by:
(a) Lord Wellesley
(b) Lord Cornwallis
(c) Warren Hastings
(d) Lord Dalhousie
Answer: (b)

Under Permanent Settlement, revenue was fixed:
(a) Annually
(b) For ten years
(c) Permanently
(d) Every harvest
Answer: (c)

In Permanent Settlement, the key intermediaries were:
(a) Ryots
(b) Zamindars
(c) Jagirdars
(d) Talukdars
Answer: (b)

If zamindars failed to pay revenue on time, their estates could be:
(a) Granted remission
(b) Given to ryots
(c) Auctioned
(d) Converted to crown land
Answer: (c)

The Ryotwari system made revenue settlements directly with the:
(a) Zamindar
(b) Mahal
(c) Ryot (cultivator)
(d) Banker
Answer: (c)

Ryotwari is most closely associated with administrator:
(a) Holt Mackenzie
(b) Thomas Munro
(c) Charles Metcalfe
(d) Mountstuart Elphinstone
Answer: (b)

The Mahalwari settlement assessed revenue at the level of the:
(a) Individual field
(b) District
(c) Mahal (village/estate)
(d) Province
Answer: (c)

Mahalwari assessment was systematised under:
(a) Holt Mackenzie
(b) Lord Cornwallis
(c) Robert Clive
(d) Lord Canning
Answer: (a)

Indigo cultivation by planters on their own land was called:
(a) Ryoti
(b) Nij
(c) Taccavi
(d) Ijara
Answer: (b)

When peasants grew indigo on their fields under advances/contracts, it was the:
(a) Nij system
(b) Mahalwari system
(c) Ryoti system
(d) Ryotwari system
Answer: (c)

Money advanced to peasants for indigo cultivation was commonly called:
(a) Dastak
(b) Avans/Taccavi
(c) Zar-i-zamin
(d) Diwani
Answer: (b)

Planters preferred alluvial soils of Bengal/Bihar for indigo mainly because:
(a) They needed less labour
(b) Indigo grows well in such soils
(c) Taxes were lower there
(d) Rainfall was irrelevant
Answer: (b)

A major problem peasants faced with indigo was that it:
(a) Restored soil fertility
(b) Needed no irrigation
(c) Exhausted soil and reduced food-crop acreage
(d) Was harvested round the year
Answer: (c)

The Indigo Revolt (Blue Rebellion) took place in:
(a) 1848–49
(b) 1859–60
(c) 1869–70
(d) 1885–86
Answer: (b)

Following the revolt, the colonial state set up the:
(a) Indigo Commission (1860)
(b) Bengal Board of Revenue (1865)
(c) Deccan Commission (1875)
(d) Famine Commission (1880)
Answer: (a)

In many areas after 1860, peasants increasingly shifted from indigo to:
(a) Cotton
(b) Jute
(c) Tea
(d) Tobacco
Answer: (b)

The book/drama that highlighted indigo peasant distress was:
(a) Anandamath
(b) Nil Darpan
(c) Hind Swaraj
(d) Gitanjali
Answer: (b)

A key risk of the fixed-revenue demand in Permanent Settlement was:
(a) Incentive for zamindars to invest in improvement
(b) Government bore all monsoon risk
(c) Zamindars faced rigid dues even in bad harvests
(d) Revenue automatically fell in drought years
Answer: (c)

One intended advantage of Mahalwari over Permanent Settlement was:
(a) No surveys needed
(b) Flexible revision of revenue assessments
(c) Abolition of all intermediaries
(d) Payment in kind only
Answer: (b)

A common reason for peasant indebtedness under indigo contracts was:
(a) High procurement prices
(b) Advances tied to compulsory indigo acreage
(c) Free choice of crop
(d) State subsidies for food grains
Answer: (b)

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FAQs: Ruling the Countryside MCQs

What is the ‘Diwani of Bengal’ and when was it granted?

The Diwani is the right to collect land revenue; it was granted to the East India Company in 1765. 

What is the Permanent Settlement and who introduced it?

A land-revenue system that fixed revenue permanently with zamindars; introduced by Lord Cornwallis in 1793.

How is Permanent Settlement different from Ryotwari and Mahalwari?

Permanent: fixed demand via zamindars; Ryotwari: direct settlement with the ryot (cultivator); Mahalwari: assessment on the mahal (village/estate), often revisable. 

Who introduced the Ryotwari system and where?

Thomas Munro in Madras/Bombay regions; revenue paid directly by ryots to the state. 

What is the Mahalwari system and who proposed it?

Proposed by Holt Mackenzie (1822); revenue assessed collectively on the mahal and collected through village headmen. 

What are nij and ryoti in indigo cultivation?

Nij: planters grew indigo on their own land; 

Ryoti: peasants grew indigo on their fields under advances/contracts. 

Why did the Indigo Revolt happen and when?

Because peasants were forced to grow indigo at low prices under coercive contracts; the revolt occurred in 1859–60 in Bengal. 

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