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The Age of Industrialisation

🎓 Class 10📖 India and the Contemporary World-II📖 9 notes🧠 5 Q&A⏱️ ~14 min

The Age of IndustrialisationStudy Notes

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The Age of Industrialisation

Explanation

The Age of Industrialisation

The chapter begins by introducing the concept of the Age of Industrialisation, a period marked by rapid technological progress, mechanisation, and the growth of factories that transformed societies and economies. The cover image of a music book published in 1900 by E.T. Paull Music Co. titled 'Dawn of the Century' symbolises this era. The central figure, an angel of progress, rides a winged wheel representing time, carrying the flag of the new century. Surrounding her are symbols of progress such as railways, cameras, machines, printing presses, and factories. These images reflect the widespread belief that industrialisation was synonymous with progress and modernity. Another illustration from a 1901 trade magazine contrasts the magic of Aladdin, representing the East and traditional craftsmanship, with the modern mechanic of the West, who builds bridges, ships, and high-rise buildings using machines and tools. This juxtaposition highlights the Western narrative of industrialisation as a triumph of technology and modernity. However, the chapter questions this glorification by asking whether industrialisation always meant rapid technological change and whether continuous mechanisation is always desirable. It invites students to critically examine the history of industrialisation, focusing first on Britain, the pioneer of industrialisation, and then on India, where industrialisation unfolded under colonial rule with distinct characteristics.

  • Industrialisation is often associated with rapid technological progress and factory growth.
  • The 'angel of progress' symbolises the optimism of the new industrial century.
  • Western narratives often contrast traditional Eastern crafts with Western mechanisation.
  • The chapter encourages critical thinking about the impacts and meanings of industrialisation.
  • Focus will be on Britain as the first industrial nation and India under colonial rule.
  • Industrialisation is not just technological but also social and economic transformation.
  • 📌 Industrialisation: The process of developing industries on a wide scale involving mechanisation and factory production.
  • 📌 Orient: Term used historically by the West to refer to Asian countries, often seen as traditional and mysterious.

Before the Industrial Revolution

Explanation

Before the Industrial Revolution

Industrialisation is commonly linked with the rise of factories and factory-based production. However, before factories became widespread in England and Europe, there was already large-scale industrial production aimed at international markets. This early phase is called proto-industrialisation. In the 17th and 18th centuries, European merchants moved from towns to the countryside to encourage peasants and artisans to produce goods for export. Towns had powerful craft guilds that controlled production, prices, and competition, making it difficult for new merchants to operate there. Consequently, merchants turned to rural areas where poor peasants and artisans, affected by the enclosure of commons and shrinking landholdings, accepted advances from merchants to produce goods. This system allowed peasants to supplement their agricultural income by producing yarn and cloth at home, using family labour. Merchants coordinated the production stages: wool was purchased, spun into yarn by spinners, woven by weavers, finished in towns like London, and then exported. London became a finishing centre. This proto-industrial system was a network of commercial exchanges controlled by merchants but carried out by numerous producers working within family units, not factories. Each merchant employed 20 to 25 workers but controlled hundreds through this decentralized system.

  • Proto-industrialisation refers to early large-scale production outside factories.
  • Merchants moved to countryside due to guild restrictions in towns.
  • Poor peasants and artisans supplemented farming income by producing goods for merchants.
  • Production was spread across many households using family labour.
  • London acted as a finishing centre for cloth before export.
  • Each merchant controlled hundreds of producers through decentralized production.
  • 📌 Proto-industrialisation: Early phase of industrial production outside factories involving rural households.
  • 📌 Guilds: Associations of craftsmen that controlled production and trade within towns.
  • 📌 Enclosure: The process of privatizing common lands, reducing peasants' access to resources.

The Coming Up of the Factory

Explanation

The Coming Up of the Factory

The earliest factories in England appeared by the 1730s, but their numbers increased significantly in the late eighteenth century. Cotton was the leading industry driving this change. Britain's raw cotton imports surged from 2.5 million pounds in 176

Practice QuestionsThe Age of Industrialisation

Includes NCERT exercise questions with answers

Q1.Ganga Action Plan came about in which year?
A.1980
B.1985
C.1990
D.1995

Answer:

1985

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Q2.Chipko Movement was started in which village?
A.Kaithal village
B.Khejrali village
C.Reni village
D.None of these

Answer:

Reni village

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Q3.What do you mean by Coliform?
A.Group of bacteria
B.Group of viruses
C.Group of diseases
D.All of the above

Answer:

Group of bacteria

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Q4.Tehri Dam was built on which of the following river?
A.River Narmada
B.Indira Gandhi Canal
C.River Ganga
D.All of these

Answer:

River Ganga

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Q5.What is the main purpose of conserving forest and wild life?
A.To maintain ecosystem
B.To protect biodiversity
C.To maintain balance
D.All of these

Answer:

All of these

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