UPSC Essentials | Daily subject-wise static quiz: Hind Swaraj, Ashtanga Hridaya, a 19th century Urdu verse, and more (Week 126)
Test your preparation for UPSC CSE Prelims with UPSC Essentials’ Week 126 daily quiz on History and Culture. This quiz features key questions on Gandhi’s Hind Swaraj, Ayurveda, artists in news and more, helping you revise crucial topics effectively. Check your answers and explanations to have an edge in upcoming exams.
Gandhi with the leaders of the non-violent resistance movement in South Africa. (Source: Wiki commons)
Are you preparing for UPSC CSE Prelims? UPSC Essentials brings to you its initiative of daily subject-wise quizzes. These quizzes are designed to help you revise some of the most important topics from the static part of the syllabus. Attempt today’s subject quiz on History and Culture to check your progress.
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1. Gandhi wrote Hind Swaraj while on board the ship Kildonan Castle on his return voyage to South Africa from London.
2. Hind Swaraj represents Gandhi’s thinking before he led India’s national movement into the ‘mass movement phase’ and contains the perspective of an expatriate Indian viewing colonial India from a distance.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2
Explanation
Mahatma Gandhi’s Hind Swaraj is perhaps his most well-known work, written in the form of a dialogue between an editor and his reader. Gandhi wrote this book in a very short duration of nine days between November 13 and 22, 1909, on board the ship Kildonan Castle on his return voyage to South Africa from London.
The dialogue unfolds through a series of questions and clarifications that the reader seeks from the editor about themes as diverse as civilisation, violence, passive resistance and swaraj, among many others. It is significant that Gandhi wrote this work first in Gujarati and later translated it into English himself.
The early and expatriate Gandhi
Hind Swaraj captures Gandhi’s early political thought on matters related to India’s colonial subjugation by the British. It was written some years before he assumed the leadership of the national movement. Gandhi returned to India in 1915 after spending two decades in South Africa. The book, therefore, represents his thinking before he went on to lead India’s national movement into what is called the ‘mass movement phase’. It also contains the perspective of an expatriate Indian, who is viewing the colonial situation of his homeland from a distance.
“When they had to leave India and come to this island The prisoners’ evil fate made the water black”
The verses mentioned above by the nineteenth-century Urdu poet Munir Shikohabadi refer to:
a) The forced exile of Indian political prisoners to the Cellular Jail on an island
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b) Pollution of the water bodies caused by the activities of the East India Company
c) The displacement of tribal communities from their ancestral lands during British colonial rule
d) The migration of indentured laborers from India to the Caribbean islands
Explanation
In the wake of the 1857 uprising, the British found themselves with more prisoners than prisons. To manage the overflow of captured rebels, they turned to the remote Andaman Islands, where they established a penal colony that would eventually become the infamous Cellular Jail, also known as Kala Pani, in Port Blair in 1906.
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The journey to these islands was punishment in itself. Prisoners were forced to violate caste and social norms: food was shared, water came from a common pump, and men of all backgrounds were shackled together. Disease ran rampant, and hygiene was nearly absent.
The nineteenth-century Urdu poet Munir Shikohabadi alluded to the impact of Kala Pani in the verses mentioned above in the question.
Therefore, a is the correct answer.
(For more, refer: From Kala Pani to overcrowded jails: Why Indian prisons still bear a colonial stamp by Nikita Mohta, Research, The Indian Express.)
QUESTION 3
Who wrote Ashtanga Hridaya?
(a) Sushruta
(b) Bhavamishra
(c) Sharangadhara
(d) Vagbhata
Explanation
The Government of India designated 23rd September as the fixed date for celebrating Ayurveda Day every year through a Gazette Notification issued in March 2025. Earlier, Ayurveda Day was celebrated on Dhanvantari Jayanti (Dhanteras).
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Charaka Samhita by Charaka (based on Agnivesha’s work), Sushruta Samhita by Sushruta, and Ashtanga Hridaya by Vagbhata, Laghu Trayi (three shorter treatises) include Madhava Nidana by Madhavakara, Bhavaprakasha by Bhavamishra, and Sharangadhara Samhita by Sharangadhara are some of the texts related to Ayurveda.
Therefore, d is the correct answer.
(For more, refer: Knowledge Nugget: National Ayurveda Day — Why the universal calendar identity of Ayurveda matters for UPSC Exam, Roshni Yadav, UPSC Essentials, The Indian Express.)
QUESTION 4
The Dadasaheb Phalke Award for 2023 was conferred upon:
Malayalam superstar Mohanlal was honoured with the Dadasaheb Phalke Award 2023. The award was presented at the 71st National Film Awards ceremony on Sept 23, 2025.
Therefore, d is the correct answer.
(For more, refer: Malayalam superstar Mohanlal honoured with the Dadasaheb Phalke Award 2023, The Indian Express)
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QUESTION 5
Consider the pair of following artists and their art forms, recently seen in news:
Artists
Art form
1. Chhannulal Mishra
Indian Hindustani classical music
2. Thiyam Suryamukhi Devi
Manipuri dance
3. Sandhya Shantaram
Warli Art
4. Kumudini Lakhia
Kathak
Which of the above pairs are correctly matched?
(a) 1 and 3 only
(b) 1, 2 and 4 only
(c) 2, 3 and 4 only
(d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
Explanation
Veteran actress Sandhya Shantaram, wife of late filmmaker V Shantaram, has died due to age-related ailments, her family said on Saturday. She was 94.
Sandhya Shantaram was the third wife of the legendary filmmaker and frequently starred as the leading lady in films such as Do Aankhen Barah Haath (1957), Navrang (1959), Jhanak Jhanak Payal Baje (1955), and Pinjra (1972).
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Manas Srivastava leads the UPSC Essentials section of The Indian Express (digital). He majorly writes on UPSC, other competitive exams and education-related projects. In the past, Manas has represented India at the G-20 Youth Summit in Mexico. He is a former member of the Youth Council, GOI. A two-time topper/gold medallist in History (both in graduation and post-graduation) from Delhi University, he has mentored and taught UPSC aspirants for more than five years. His diverse role in The Indian Express consists of writing, editing, anchoring/ hosting, interviewing experts, and curating and simplifying news for the benefit of students. He hosts the YouTube talk show called ‘Art and Culture with Devdutt Pattanaik’ and a LIVE series on Instagram and YouTube called ‘LIVE with Manas’.His talks on ‘How to read a newspaper’ focus on newspaper reading as an essential habit for students. His articles and videos aim at finding solutions to the general queries of students and hence he believes in being students' editor, preparing them not just for any exam but helping them to become informed citizens. This is where he makes his teaching profession meet journalism. He is also the editor of UPSC Essentials' monthly magazine for the aspirants. He is a recipient of the Dip Chand Memorial Award, the Lala Ram Mohan Prize and Prof. Papiya Ghosh Memorial Prize for academic excellence. He was also awarded the University’s Post-Graduate Scholarship for pursuing M.A. in History where he chose to specialise in Ancient India due to his keen interest in Archaeology. He has also successfully completed a Certificate course on Women’s Studies by the Women’s Studies Development Centre, DU. As a part of N.S.S in the past, Manas has worked with national and international organisations and has shown keen interest and active participation in Social Service. He has led and been a part of projects involving areas such as gender sensitisation, persons with disability, helping slum dwellers, environment, adopting our heritage programme. He has also presented a case study on ‘Psychological stress among students’ at ICSQCC- Sri Lanka. As a compere for seminars and other events he likes to keep his orating hobby alive. His interests also lie in International Relations, Governance, Social issues, Essays and poetry. ... Read More