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Modern India - Complete Study Notes | SSC CGL General Awareness

By Exam Atlas · 7/2/2026

Modern India — Complete Notes for SSC CGL General Awareness

Quick Answer: Modern India covers the arrival of Europeans, the British conquest of India (Plassey and Buxar), the Anglo wars, British economic and land-revenue policies, the peasant, tribal and civil uprisings, the socio-religious reform movements, the growth of education and the press, and the Revolt of 1857. For SSC CGL, Modern History carries about 2-4 questions in the Tier-1 General Awareness paper and is the highest-scoring history area.

This chapter covers the establishment and consolidation of British rule up to 1858; the organised freedom struggle (Indian National Congress, Gandhian movements) is covered in the next chapter. Read the whole chapter once, then use the Governors-General table, Quick Revision Table, and FAQs before your exam.


1. Advent of the Europeans

Who were the first Europeans to arrive in India? The Portuguese were the first Europeans to reach India by sea, when Vasco da Gama landed at Calicut in 1498. They were followed by the Dutch, English, Danish, and French trading companies, all seeking a share of India's lucrative spice and textile trade.

European Trading Companies

CompanyFoundedFirst / Key PersonMain Centre
Portuguese (Estado da India)Arrived 1498Vasco da Gama; Alfonso de Albuquerque (captured Goa, 1510)Goa
English East India Company1600Chartered by Queen Elizabeth I; first factory at Surat (1613)Calcutta
Dutch East India Company (VOC)1602Focused on the spice islands; ousted from India by the EnglishPulicat
Danish East India Company1616Minor player; sold settlements to the BritishTranquebar / Serampore
French East India Company1664Founded under Colbert; Dupleix the ablest governorPondicherry

The Carnatic Wars (1746-1763)

  • Three wars between the English and the French for supremacy in South India.
  • The Battle of Wandiwash (1760) was decisive: the English (Sir Eyre Coote) crushed the French.
  • The Treaty of Paris (1763) ended French political ambitions in India; the English became the strongest European power.

2. British Conquest of Bengal

Which battle marks the beginning of British rule in India? The Battle of Plassey (1757) marks the beginning of British political power in India. Robert Clive defeated Nawab Siraj-ud-Daulah of Bengal, aided by the betrayal of the Nawab's commander Mir Jafar, giving the East India Company control over Bengal's wealth.

Plassey vs Buxar — the Two Decisive Battles

BasisBattle of Plassey (1757)Battle of Buxar (1764)
British commanderRobert CliveHector Munro
DefeatedSiraj-ud-Daulah (Nawab of Bengal)Combined army of Mir Qasim, Shuja-ud-Daulah (Awadh) & Shah Alam II (Mughal emperor)
SignificanceBeginning of British political powerConfirmed the British as the real rulers of India
OutcomeMir Jafar made puppet NawabTreaty of Allahabad (1765); Company got the Diwani of Bengal, Bihar & Orissa

The grant of Diwani in 1765 (by Shah Alam II to Clive) legally established Company rule over the revenues of Bengal, Bihar, and Orissa — the foundation of the British Empire in India. This began the Dual Government in Bengal (1765-72), ended by Warren Hastings.


3. Expansion of British Power

How did the British expand across India? The British expanded through a series of wars against the Marathas, Mysore, and the Sikhs, and through two key policies — the Subsidiary Alliance of Lord Wellesley and the Doctrine of Lapse of Lord Dalhousie — which absorbed Indian states one after another.

Expansion Policies

  • Subsidiary Alliance — introduced by Lord Wellesley (1798). The first ruler to accept it was the Nizam of Hyderabad. States had to keep British troops and could not make alliances without British consent.
  • Doctrine of Lapse — used by Lord Dalhousie. States without a natural male heir "lapsed" to the British. Satara (first), Jhansi, Nagpur, Sambalpur, and Jaitpur were annexed this way.

Anglo-Mysore Wars (against Haidar Ali & Tipu Sultan)

WarPeriodResult / Treaty
First1767-69Haidar Ali won; Treaty of Madras
Second1780-84Haidar Ali died (1782); Treaty of Mangalore
Third1790-92Tipu lost half his territory; Treaty of Seringapatam
Fourth1799Tipu Sultan died defending Seringapatam; British victory

Anglo-Maratha & Anglo-Sikh Wars

WarPeriodResult / Treaty
First Anglo-Maratha1775-82Treaty of Salbai (status quo)
Second Anglo-Maratha1803-05British gained large territory (after Treaty of Bassein, 1802)
Third Anglo-Maratha1817-18Maratha power crushed; Peshwaship abolished
First Anglo-Sikh1845-46Treaty of Lahore
Second Anglo-Sikh1848-49Punjab annexed by Dalhousie

4. British Economic Policies and the Drain of Wealth

What was the "Drain of Wealth" theory? The Drain of Wealth theory holds that Britain was continuously draining India's wealth and resources to England without any economic return, keeping India poor. It was first explained by Dadabhai Naoroji in his book "Poverty and Un-British Rule in India".

Key Points

  • Dadabhai Naoroji, the "Grand Old Man of India", gave the Drain of Wealth theory; R.C. Dutt described it in his "Economic History of India".
  • De-industrialisation: British policies ruined India's handicrafts and textile industry, turning India into a supplier of raw materials and a market for British goods.
  • Commercialisation of agriculture: farmers were forced to grow cash crops (indigo, cotton, opium) instead of food, worsening famines.
  • Famines: the Great Famine of 1876-78 killed millions. The first Famine Commission (1880) was set up under Richard Strachey during Lord Lytton's tenure.

5. British Land Revenue Systems

What were the three land revenue systems under British rule? The British introduced three land revenue systems: the Permanent Settlement (with zamindars), the Ryotwari System (directly with cultivators), and the Mahalwari System (with village communities). Together they covered almost all of British India and heavily taxed the peasantry.

Comparison of Land Revenue Systems

SystemIntroduced ByYearAreaRevenue Paid By
Permanent SettlementLord Cornwallis1793Bengal, Bihar, OrissaZamindars (made landowners)
Ryotwari SystemThomas Munro & Alexander Read1820Madras & BombayRyots (cultivators directly)
Mahalwari SystemHolt Mackenzie1822North-West Provinces, PunjabVillage / Mahal (jointly)
Memory Trick: Permanent-Cornwallis, Ryotwari-Munro, Mahalwari-Mackenzie = the "C-M-M" rule. All three raised taxes and impoverished farmers.

6. Peasant, Tribal and Civil Uprisings

What were the major tribal and peasant revolts against British rule? Before and after 1857, many peasant and tribal groups revolted against British land policies, high taxes, and interference. Major examples include the Santhal Rebellion, the Munda Rebellion of Birsa Munda, the Indigo Revolt, and the Deccan Riots.

Major Uprisings

UprisingYearRegion / Leader
Sanyasi Rebellion1770sBengal
Kol Rebellion1831-32Chotanagpur (Bihar/Jharkhand)
Santhal Rebellion1855-56Bihar/Jharkhand — Sidhu & Kanhu
Indigo Revolt1859-60Bengal — against indigo planters
Deccan Riots1875Maharashtra — against moneylenders
Munda Rebellion (Ulgulan)1899-1900Chotanagpur — Birsa Munda

Birsa Munda, leader of the Munda "Ulgulan" (Great Tumult), is remembered as a tribal icon and freedom fighter.


7. Socio-Religious Reform Movements

What was the aim of the 19th-century reform movements? The socio-religious reform movements of the 19th century aimed to remove social evils like Sati, child marriage, and caste discrimination, and to promote women's education and rational thinking. They form the basis of the modern Indian social awakening or "Renaissance".

Major Reform Movements and Reformers

Movement / InstitutionFounderYear
Brahmo SamajRaja Ram Mohan Roy1828
Young Bengal MovementHenry Vivian Derozio1820s
Prarthana SamajAtmaram Pandurang1867
Satyashodhak SamajJyotiba Phule1873
Arya SamajSwami Dayananda Saraswati1875
Aligarh MovementSir Syed Ahmad Khan1875 (MAO College)
Deoband MovementMuhammad Qasim Nanautavi1866
Ramakrishna MissionSwami Vivekananda1897

Key Reformers — Must Know

  • Raja Ram Mohan Roy — the "Father of Modern India"; founded the Brahmo Samaj; his efforts led to the abolition of Sati in 1829 (by Lord William Bentinck); published Sambad Kaumudi.
  • Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar — champion of widow remarriage; the Widow Remarriage Act (1856) was passed due to his efforts.
  • Swami Dayananda Saraswati — founded the Arya Samaj; gave the slogan "Back to the Vedas"; wrote Satyarth Prakash.
  • Swami Vivekananda — disciple of Ramakrishna Paramahansa; his 1893 Chicago address introduced Indian spirituality to the West.
  • Jyotiba Phule — fought for lower castes and women's education; wrote Gulamgiri.

8. Development of Education and the Press

How did modern education develop under the British? Modern English education developed through Macaulay's Minute of 1835, which made English the medium of higher education, and Wood's Despatch of 1854, called the "Magna Carta of English Education in India", which set up an organised education system and universities.

Education Milestones

  • Charter Act 1813 — first allotted funds (₹1 lakh) for education in India.
  • Macaulay's Minute (1835) — English made the medium of instruction; "downward filtration theory".
  • Wood's Despatch (1854) — the "Magna Carta of English Education"; led to universities of Calcutta, Bombay, and Madras (1857).
  • Hunter Commission (1882) — focused on primary and secondary education (under Lord Ripon).

Growth of the Press

  • India's first newspaper was the Bengal Gazette (1780) by James Augustus Hicky.
  • Metcalfe is called the "Liberator of the Indian Press" (1835).
  • The Vernacular Press Act (1878) was passed by Lord Lytton to curb Indian-language newspapers; it was repealed by Lord Ripon.

9. The Revolt of 1857

What caused the Revolt of 1857? The Revolt of 1857, also called the First War of Independence, was caused by political annexations, economic exploitation, and social and religious interference. Its immediate cause was the introduction of the Enfield rifle with greased cartridges (rumoured to use cow and pig fat), which offended both Hindu and Muslim sepoys.

Key Facts

  • It began at Meerut on 10 May 1857; earlier, Mangal Pandey had revolted at Barrackpore (29 March 1857).
  • The rebels declared the Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar as their symbolic leader.

Centres and Leaders of the Revolt

CentreLeader
DelhiBahadur Shah Zafar (General Bakht Khan)
KanpurNana Sahib (with Tantia Tope)
LucknowBegum Hazrat Mahal
JhansiRani Lakshmibai
Bihar (Arrah)Kunwar Singh
BareillyKhan Bahadur Khan
FaizabadMaulvi Ahmadullah

Results of the Revolt

  • The revolt failed, but it ended the rule of the East India Company.
  • By the Government of India Act 1858, power was transferred to the British Crown; Queen Victoria's Proclamation was issued.
  • The Mughal dynasty formally ended; Bahadur Shah Zafar was exiled to Rangoon.

10. Governors-General and Viceroys

Who was the first Governor-General and the first Viceroy of India? Lord William Bentinck was the first Governor-General of India (1833), while Lord Canning was the last Governor-General and the first Viceroy of India (1858). Each administrator is remembered for specific reforms and events.

Important Administrators and Their Work

AdministratorKey Work
Warren HastingsFirst Governor-General of Bengal (1773); ended Dual Government; Regulating Act framework
Lord CornwallisPermanent Settlement (1793); "Father of Civil Services in India"
Lord WellesleySubsidiary Alliance (1798)
Lord William BentinckFirst Governor-General of India; abolished Sati (1829); suppressed Thuggee
Lord DalhousieDoctrine of Lapse; first railway (1853); telegraph; Wood's Despatch (1854)
Lord CanningLast Governor-General & first Viceroy; the 1857 Revolt; Universities Act (1857)
Lord MayoFirst census (1872); died in office (assassinated in the Andamans)
Lord LyttonVernacular Press Act & Arms Act (1878); Delhi Durbar (1877)
Lord Ripon"Father of Local Self-Government" (1882); First Factory Act (1881); Ilbert Bill; Hunter Commission
Lord DufferinIndian National Congress founded (1885)
Lord CurzonPartition of Bengal (1905); Universities Act (1904); revived the ASI
Lord Hardinge IICapital shifted from Calcutta to Delhi (1911); Bengal partition annulled
Memory Trick: Bentinck = "Sati banned"; Dalhousie = "Railways & Lapse"; Canning = "1857 & first Viceroy"; Ripon = "Local self-government"; Curzon = "Bengal Partition"; Hardinge II = "Capital to Delhi".

11. Important Acts of the British Period

ActYearKey Provision
Regulating Act1773First step by British Parliament to control the Company; Governor-General of Bengal created
Pitt's India Act1784Set up the Board of Control; dual government
Charter Act1813Ended the Company's trade monopoly (except tea & China); funds for education
Charter Act1833Created the Governor-General of India; Company became purely administrative
Charter Act1853Open competition for the Civil Services
Government of India Act1858Crown rule began; office of Secretary of State created
Indian Councils Act1861Restored legislative powers to Bombay & Madras; portfolio system
Indian Councils Act1909Morley-Minto Reforms; introduced separate electorates

Previous Year Style MCQs (Practice Set)

Attempt these 20 SSC-CGL-pattern questions, then check the answer key below.

Q1. The Battle of Plassey (1757) was fought between the British and
(a) Mir Qasim
(b) Siraj-ud-Daulah
(c) Shah Alam II
(d) Tipu Sultan
Q2. Who was the first European to reach India by sea?
(a) Christopher Columbus
(b) Vasco da Gama
(c) Alfonso de Albuquerque
(d) Dupleix
Q3. The Subsidiary Alliance was introduced by
(a) Lord Dalhousie
(b) Lord Wellesley
(c) Lord Cornwallis
(d) Warren Hastings
Q4. The Permanent Settlement of 1793 was introduced by
(a) Lord Wellesley
(b) Thomas Munro
(c) Lord Cornwallis
(d) Lord Ripon
Q5. Who founded the Brahmo Samaj?
(a) Dayananda Saraswati
(b) Raja Ram Mohan Roy
(c) Vivekananda
(d) Jyotiba Phule
Q6. The Revolt of 1857 began at
(a) Delhi
(b) Meerut
(c) Kanpur
(d) Jhansi
Q7. The Doctrine of Lapse was associated with
(a) Lord Canning
(b) Lord Dalhousie
(c) Lord Curzon
(d) Lord Ripon
Q8. Sati was abolished in 1829 during the time of
(a) Lord Ripon
(b) Lord William Bentinck
(c) Lord Curzon
(d) Lord Wellesley
Q9. The slogan "Back to the Vedas" was given by
(a) Raja Ram Mohan Roy
(b) Swami Vivekananda
(c) Dayananda Saraswati
(d) Sir Syed Ahmad Khan
Q10. The Battle of Buxar (1764) was won by
(a) the Marathas
(b) the British
(c) the Mughals
(d) the French
Q11. Who was the last Governor-General and the first Viceroy of India?
(a) Lord Dalhousie
(b) Lord Canning
(c) Lord Ripon
(d) Warren Hastings
Q12. The leader of the 1857 revolt at Kanpur was
(a) Rani Lakshmibai
(b) Nana Sahib
(c) Kunwar Singh
(d) Begum Hazrat Mahal
Q13. The Ramakrishna Mission was founded by
(a) Ramakrishna Paramahansa
(b) Swami Vivekananda
(c) Keshab Chandra Sen
(d) Annie Besant
Q14. The "Drain of Wealth" theory was given by
(a) R.C. Dutt
(b) Dadabhai Naoroji
(c) M.G. Ranade
(d) G.K. Gokhale
Q15. Tipu Sultan died in which Anglo-Mysore War?
(a) First
(b) Second
(c) Third
(d) Fourth
Q16. The leader of the Munda Rebellion (Ulgulan) was
(a) Sidhu Murmu
(b) Birsa Munda
(c) Kanhu
(d) Tilka Manjhi
Q17. Wood's Despatch of 1854 is known as the
(a) Magna Carta of English Education
(b) Charter of Freedom
(c) White Paper
(d) Blue Water Policy
Q18. The Vernacular Press Act (1878) was passed by
(a) Lord Ripon
(b) Lord Lytton
(c) Lord Curzon
(d) Lord Canning
Q19. India's first newspaper, the Bengal Gazette, was started by
(a) Raja Ram Mohan Roy
(b) James Augustus Hicky
(c) Bal Gangadhar Tilak
(d) Robert Clive
Q20. The capital of British India was shifted from Calcutta to Delhi in
(a) 1905
(b) 1911
(c) 1919
(d) 1935

Answer Key

Answer Key
1-b    2-b    3-b    4-c    5-b    6-b    7-b    8-b    9-c    10-b    11-b    12-b    13-b    14-b    15-d    16-b    17-a    18-b    19-b    20-b

Quick Revision Table — Most Asked in SSC CGL

FactAnswer
First European to reach India (sea)Vasco da Gama (1498, Calicut)
Captured Goa (1510)Alfonso de Albuquerque
English EIC chartered1600 (by Queen Elizabeth I)
Decisive Anglo-French battleBattle of Wandiwash (1760)
Battle of Plassey1757 (Clive vs Siraj-ud-Daulah)
Battle of Buxar1764 (British vs Mir Qasim + allies)
Diwani of Bengal granted1765 (Treaty of Allahabad)
Subsidiary AllianceLord Wellesley (1798)
Doctrine of LapseLord Dalhousie
Tipu Sultan died1799 (4th Anglo-Mysore War)
Third Anglo-Maratha War (result)1817-18; Peshwaship abolished
Punjab annexed1849 (after 2nd Anglo-Sikh War)
Permanent SettlementLord Cornwallis (1793)
Ryotwari SystemThomas Munro (Madras/Bombay)
Mahalwari SystemHolt Mackenzie (1822)
Drain of Wealth theoryDadabhai Naoroji
Santhal Rebellion leadersSidhu & Kanhu (1855-56)
Munda Rebellion (Ulgulan) leaderBirsa Munda (1899-1900)
Brahmo Samaj founderRaja Ram Mohan Roy (1828)
Sati abolished1829 (Lord William Bentinck)
Widow Remarriage Act1856 (I.C. Vidyasagar)
Arya Samaj founderDayananda Saraswati (1875)
"Magna Carta of English Education"Wood's Despatch (1854)
India's first newspaperBengal Gazette (1780, Hicky)
Vernacular Press Act1878 (Lord Lytton)
Revolt of 1857 began atMeerut (10 May 1857)
Fired the first shot (Barrackpore)Mangal Pandey
Company rule ended byGovernment of India Act 1858
First Governor-General of IndiaLord William Bentinck (1833)
Last Governor-General / first ViceroyLord Canning
First census of India1872 (Lord Mayo)
Partition of BengalLord Curzon (1905)
Capital shifted to Delhi1911 (Lord Hardinge II)

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

How many questions come from Modern History in SSC CGL?

Modern History usually contributes about 2-4 questions in the SSC CGL Tier-1 General Awareness section, making it the highest-weight history area. Topics like the Revolt of 1857, Governors-General, tribal revolts, and reform movements are asked almost every year.

Which battle marks the beginning of British rule in India?

The Battle of Plassey (1757) marks the beginning of British political power in India, where Robert Clive defeated Nawab Siraj-ud-Daulah of Bengal. The Battle of Buxar (1764) then confirmed the British as the real rulers of eastern India.

What is the difference between the Battles of Plassey and Buxar?

At Plassey (1757) the British defeated only the Nawab of Bengal, largely through betrayal, while at Buxar (1764) they defeated the combined forces of the Nawab of Awadh, the Mughal emperor, and Mir Qasim. Buxar was militarily more decisive and gave the British the Diwani of Bengal.

What was the Drain of Wealth theory?

The Drain of Wealth theory, given by Dadabhai Naoroji, argued that Britain was constantly transferring India's wealth to England without economic return, which kept India poor. He explained it in his book "Poverty and Un-British Rule in India".

Who was Birsa Munda?

Birsa Munda was a tribal leader from the Chotanagpur region who led the Munda Rebellion, called "Ulgulan" (the Great Tumult), in 1899-1900 against British land policies. He is honoured today as a tribal icon and freedom fighter.

What was the immediate cause of the Revolt of 1857?

The immediate cause of the Revolt of 1857 was the introduction of the Enfield rifle, whose cartridges were rumoured to be greased with cow and pig fat. Since sepoys had to bite the cartridges, this offended both Hindu and Muslim soldiers and sparked the uprising at Meerut.

Who was the first Viceroy of India?

Lord Canning was the first Viceroy of India, appointed in 1858 after the Government of India Act transferred power from the East India Company to the British Crown. He was also the last Governor-General of India.

What is the best strategy to prepare Modern India for SSC CGL?

Focus on the Governors-General and their reforms, the important battles and Anglo wars, the reform movements and tribal revolts, and the Revolt of 1857. Revise the Quick Revision Table weekly and solve previous-year MCQs to lock in the repeated facts.


Prepared by the ExamAtlas Content Team. Facts are compiled from NCERT, standard reference books, and verified against SSC CGL previous-year question patterns. Practise these topics with free mock tests and daily quizzes on ExamAtlas.com.

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