CTET · Study & Practice

History — Our Pasts (Ancient to Modern India)

AreaSocial Studies & Pedagogy DifficultyModerate CTET weightage8-12 questions in the Social Studies content section of Paper II (History is the single largest slice)

History is the heaviest content block in CTET Paper II Social Studies, and almost every question is drawn straight from the three NCERT 'Our Pasts' textbooks (Classes VI, VII and VIII). The examiner rarely asks you to write an essay; instead you get a sharp fact-recall item or a source-based prompt: which ruler issued these edicts, which battle handed Bengal to the Company, who founded the Indian National Congress and in which year. The chronology runs from the very first hunter-gatherers and farmers, through the Harappan cities and the great empires of the Mauryas and Guptas, into the Sultans and Mughals, then the long century of Company rule and the freedom struggle that ended at midnight on 15 August 1947. Dates and names are the currency of this paper, so this chapter fixes the verified ones cold, organises them into five teachable topics, and frames each with the classroom-pedagogy angle CTET layers on top.

Topics

⚡ Smart tips & memory hooks

Memory hooks and exam-smart tips to lock this chapter in and answer CTET MCQs quickly and accurately.

  • Anchor four dates and the rest hang off them: Plassey 1757, INC 1885, Dandi 1930, Independence 1947.
  • Battles "by 7s": Plassey 1757 (Bengal won), Buxar 1764 -> Diwani 1765 (revenue control). Diwani = the right to collect REVENUE.
  • Gandhi movement ladder: Non-Cooperation 1920 -> Civil Disobedience/Dandi 1930 -> Quit India 1942. (Roughly a decade apart.)
  • Stage-to-empire keyword: Harappa = town planning/Great Bath; Mauryas = Ashoka & Dhamma; Guptas = Golden Age/zero; Akbar = sulh-i-kul.
  • If a question says "First War of Independence" or "greased cartridges / Meerut" -> Revolt of 1857.
  • Sources split cleanly: dug-up things (tools, coins, seals, buildings) = ARCHAEOLOGICAL; written things (manuscripts, inscriptions) = LITERARY.

⚠️ Common mistakes & traps

CTET loves to test these exact confusions. Internalise each trap before exam day.

  • Confusing the Battle of Plassey (1757) with Buxar (1764) - Plassey won Bengal; Buxar led to the Diwani (revenue rights) in 1765.
  • Mixing up the dates 1942 (Quit India) and 1930 (Dandi/Civil Disobedience) - Dandi is salt, Quit India is "Do or Die".
  • Saying the INC was founded in 1857 or 1947 - it was founded in 1885; 1857 is the Revolt, 1947 is Independence.
  • Calling the Mughals part of the Delhi Sultanate - the Sultanate (Slave to Lodi) came first; the Mughals began with Babur in 1526.
  • Treating inscriptions as archaeological sources - inscriptions are written, so they are a LITERARY/written source.
  • Confusing Independence Day (15 August 1947) with Republic Day (26 January 1950, when the Constitution came into force).

📈 CTET exam insight & PYQ analysis

History dominates the Social Studies content questions in Paper II, and the format is overwhelmingly direct fact-recall plus the occasional source-based item. The most repeated questions are on landmark dates and the people attached to them: founding of the INC (1885), Battle of Plassey (1757), the Dandi March (1930), Quit India (1942) and Independence (1947). Ashoka and the Kalinga War, the Harappan town planning and the Great Bath, the Bhakti-Sufi saints, and Akbar's sulh-i-kul recur often. Expect to classify sources as archaeological versus literary, and to match a movement to its slogan or leader. Pedagogy follow-ups ask how to teach history using sources, timelines, maps and local field visits rather than rote memorisation - testing the idea that history should be taught as inquiry, not just dates to be crammed.

🎴 Flashcards — instant recall

Tap a card to reveal the answer. Drill these until they are automatic.

In which year was the Indian National Congress founded, and where was its first session?Tap to reveal
1885; first session in Bombay (A. O. Hume key figure)
Which battle in 1757 gave the East India Company control of Bengal?Tap to reveal
Battle of Plassey (Clive defeated Siraj-ud-Daulah)
After which war did Ashoka adopt Buddhism?Tap to reveal
The Kalinga War (c. 261 BCE)
When did the Dandi Salt March take place and which movement did it start?Tap to reveal
1930; the Civil Disobedience Movement
Which movement had the slogan "Do or Die"?Tap to reveal
Quit India Movement (1942)
On what date did India become independent?Tap to reveal
15 August 1947 (with the Partition into India and Pakistan)
The Harappan Civilisation is famous for what features?Tap to reveal
Planned cities, grid streets, drainage and the Great Bath (c. 2500 BCE)
What was Akbar's policy of religious tolerance called?Tap to reveal
Sulh-i-kul (peace with all)
Coins, tools and seals are which kind of source; manuscripts and inscriptions which kind?Tap to reveal
Archaeological sources; literary (written) sources
The Diwani granted to the Company in 1765 gave it the right to do what?Tap to reveal
Collect land revenue in Bengal, Bihar and Orissa
Who was the founder of the Mauryan Empire and his guide?Tap to reveal
Chandragupta Maurya, guided by Chanakya (Kautilya)
When did the Constitution come into force, making India a republic?Tap to reveal
26 January 1950

📌 Quick revision

Indian history for CTET runs in a clear line: from hunter-gatherers and the first farmers (Neolithic, Mehrgarh), to the planned Harappan cities (c. 2500 BCE), the Vedic age and mahajanapadas, the teachings of Mahavira (Jainism) and Buddha (Buddhism), and the great Mauryan Empire whose king Ashoka turned to Dhamma after the Kalinga War. The Gupta golden age and the decimal/zero, the Delhi Sultanate and the Mughals (Akbar's sulh-i-kul), and the Bhakti-Sufi devotional movements carry the medieval story. The modern era opens with the East India Company - Plassey 1757, the Diwani of 1765, the wrecking of weavers and farmers - climaxing in the Revolt of 1857, after which the Crown took over. The freedom struggle then runs from the INC (1885) through Gandhi's Non-Cooperation (1920), Civil Disobedience/Dandi (1930) and Quit India (1942) to Independence on 15 August 1947 and the Republic on 26 January 1950. Sources split into archaeological and literary, and the pedagogy angle is to teach history as inquiry using sources, timelines and maps, not rote dates.

Chapter test

🏆 Vidaara CTET success checklist

You have truly mastered History — Our Pasts (Ancient to Modern India) when you can tick every box below.

  • Recall every formula in this chapter without looking them up
  • Solve each topic’s practice set with at least 80% accuracy
  • Use the chapter shortcuts to cut your solving time in half
  • Spot and avoid every common trap listed above
  • Score 80%+ on the timed chapter test

📋 Chapter mastery scorecard

Track where you stand. Aim for the target before moving to the next chapter.

Skill checkpointTarget
Concept theory & formulas understood100%
Topic practice sets attempted (5 topics)5/5
Best topic-test score— → 80%+
Chapter test score— → 80%+
Flashcards drilled to instant recall12 cards