Sources & Earliest Societies
History is reconstructed from sources, and CTET expects you to classify them. Archaeological sources are physical remains studied by digging - tools, pottery, coins, seals, buildings and bones. Literary sources are written records - manuscripts (often on palm leaf or birch bark), and inscriptions carved on stone or metal. The earliest people were hunter-gatherers (Palaeolithic) who moved in small groups, hunted animals and gathered fruits, roots and nuts, and made tools of stone (the long span called the Stone Age). The big turning point was the Neolithic, when people learned farming and herding - growing crops such as wheat and barley and domesticating animals (sheep, goat, cattle). This let them settle in one place, store grain, make pots and live in villages; sites like Mehrgarh (in present-day Pakistan) are among the earliest evidence of the first farmers and herders in the subcontinent. The shift from food-gathering to food-producing is the single most tested idea here.
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Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Landmark dates to memorise cold
| Harappan Civilisation | c. 2500 BCE (mature phase ~2600-1900 BCE), Bronze Age cities |
|---|---|
| Mauryan Empire / Ashoka | Mauryas from c. 321 BCE; Ashoka ruled c. 268-232 BCE; Kalinga War c. 261 BCE |
| Battle of Plassey | 1757 - Company defeats Siraj-ud-Daulah of Bengal |
| Battle of Buxar | 1764 - Company wins Diwani (revenue rights) of Bengal in 1765 |
| Revolt of 1857 | First major uprising against Company rule; began at Meerut |
| Indian National Congress | Founded 1885 (A. O. Hume); first session in Bombay |
| Dandi Salt March | 1930 - Civil Disobedience Movement led by Gandhi |
| Quit India Movement | 1942 - "Do or Die"; demand for immediate British withdrawal |
| Independence | 15 August 1947; Republic on 26 January 1950 |
Who is who / what is what
| Ashoka | Mauryan king; spread Dhamma; edicts in Brahmi/Prakrit |
|---|---|
| Chandragupta Maurya | Founder of Mauryan Empire, guided by Chanakya (Kautilya) |
| Samudragupta | Gupta ruler praised in the Prayag Prashasti (Allahabad pillar) |
| Akbar | Greatest Mughal; policy of sulh-i-kul (peace with all); Din-i-Ilahi |
| Sources of history | Archaeological (tools, coins, monuments) + literary (manuscripts, inscriptions) |
| Bhakti & Sufi | Devotional movements stressing love of God over ritual/caste |