1. (i) After the Napoleonic wars had ended, thousands of soldiers returned to their villages. They needed alternative jobs to survive. (ii) But this was time when grain from Europe began flowing into England, prices declined and an Agricultural Depression set in. (iii) Anxious landowners began reducingRead more

    (i) After the Napoleonic wars had ended, thousands of soldiers returned to
    their villages. They needed alternative jobs to survive.
    (ii) But this was time when grain from Europe began flowing into England,
    prices declined and an Agricultural Depression set in.
    (iii) Anxious landowners began reducing the area they cultivated and
    demanded that the imports of crops be stopped.
    (iv) They tried to cut wages and reduce the number of workmen they
    employed.
    (v) The unemployed poor tramped from village to village, and those with
    uncertain jobs lived in fear of a loss of their livelihood.

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  2. (i) The new enclosures were different from the old, unlike the l6th century enclosures that promoted sheep farming. (ii) The land being enclosed in the late 18th century was for grain production. (iii) The new enclosures were happening in a different content: they became a sign of a changing time. (Read more

    (i) The new enclosures were different from the old, unlike the l6th century
    enclosures that promoted sheep farming.
    (ii) The land being enclosed in the late 18th century was for grain production.
    (iii) The new enclosures were happening in a different content: they became
    a sign of a changing time.
    (iv) From the mid-18th century, the English population expanded
    rapidly. This meant an increased demand for foodgrains to feed the
    population.
    (v) Moreover, Britain at this time was industrialising. More and more people
    began to live and work in urban areas.
    (vi) Men from rural areas migrated to towns in search of jobs. To survive,
    they had to buy foodgrains in the marker. So, these conditions led to
    more and more enclosures.

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  3. (i) By 1773, the British government in Bengal had established a monopoly over opium trade. (ii) No one else was legally permitted to trade in opium. (iii) By the 1820s, the British found that opium production in their territories was rapidly declining and outside its territories, the production wasRead more

    (i) By 1773, the British government in Bengal had established a monopoly
    over opium trade.
    (ii) No one else was legally permitted to trade in opium.
    (iii) By the 1820s, the British found that opium production in their territories
    was rapidly declining and outside its territories, the production was
    increasing.
    (iv) It was produced in the princely states where local traders were offering
    much higher prices to peasants and exporting opium to China.
    (v) To the British, this trade was illegal; it was smuggling and it had to be
    stopped. Government monopoly had tr-i be retained.
    (vi) It therefore, instructed its agents posted in the princely stares to
    confiscate all opium and destroy the crops.

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  4. (i) In the rural areas of Bengal and Bihar, there were large number of poor peasants. They were very given advance money to produce opium by their village headmen. (ii) When offered loan, the cultivators were tempted to accept it, hoping to meet their immediate need and pay back the loan later'. (iiRead more

    (i) In the rural areas of Bengal and Bihar, there were large number of poor
    peasants. They were very given advance money to produce opium by
    their village headmen.
    (ii) When offered loan, the cultivators were tempted to accept it, hoping to
    meet their immediate need and pay back the loan later’.
    (iii) But the loan tied the peasant to the headman and through him to the
    government.
    (iv) The government opium agents were advancing money to headmen,
    who in turn gave it to the cultivator.
    (v) By taking the loan, the cultivator was forced to grow opium on a specific
    area of land and hand over the produce to the agents.
    (vi) He had no choice of planting the field with the crop of his choice or
    selling his produce to anyone else but the government agent. And he
    had to accept the low price offered for the produce.

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  5. (i) The crop had to be grown on the best land, on fields that lay near villages and were well manured. On this land, villagers usually produced pulses. If they planted opium on this land, pulses could not be grown there. (ii) Many cultivators owned no land. To cultivate, they had to pay rent to theRead more

    (i) The crop had to be grown on the best land, on fields that lay near
    villages and were well manured. On this land, villagers usually
    produced pulses. If they planted opium on this land, pulses could not
    be grown there.
    (ii) Many cultivators owned no land. To cultivate, they had to pay rent to the
    landlord for the lease land. And the rent charged on good land near the
    villages were very high.
    (iii) The cultivation of opium was a difficult process. The plant u,as delicate
    and the cultivators had to spend long hours nurturing it.
    (iv) The price government paid to the cultivators for opium was very low. It
    was unprofitable for cultivators to grow opium at that price.

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