UGC NET History UNIT-5 ADMINISTRATION & ECONOMY (1200–1750 CE) MCQs

🏛️ SECTION A – Administration under the Delhi Sultanate (1–20)

  1. The nature of the Delhi Sultanate state was mainly —
    (A) Theocratic (B) Theocentric (C) Secular (D) Republican
    Answer: (B) Theocentric
    Explanation: The Sultan ruled as the “Shadow of God” (Zil-i-Ilahi), guided by religion but not ruled by clergy.

  2. Who described himself as Zil-i-Ilahi (Shadow of God)?
    (A) Alauddin Khalji (B) Balban (C) Iltutmish (D) Muhammad bin Tughlaq
    Answer: (B) Balban
    Explanation: Balban emphasized divine kingship and strict court discipline.

  3. The head of the military department under the Delhi Sultanate was —
    (A) Wazir (B) Ariz-i-Mamalik (C) Qazi-ul-Quzat (D) Diwan-i-Riyasat
    Answer: (B) Ariz-i-Mamalik
    Explanation: The Diwan-i-Arz supervised the army and maintained records of soldiers.

  4. Who was in charge of correspondence and royal orders?
    (A) Diwan-i-Insha (B) Diwan-i-Arz (C) Diwan-i-Rasalat (D) Qazi
    Answer: (A) Diwan-i-Insha
    Explanation: Managed royal letters and official documents.

  5. Diwan-i-Wizarat dealt with —
    (A) Religious affairs (B) Military organization (C) Finance and revenue (D) Justice
    Answer: (C) Finance and revenue
    Explanation: The Wazir supervised revenue and expenditure.

  6. The head of religious and charitable affairs was —
    (A) Sadr-us-Sudur (B) Qazi (C) Ariz (D) Wazir
    Answer: (A) Sadr-us-Sudur
    Explanation: Controlled grants, endowments, and implementation of Sharia.

  7. Who among the following first organized the Iqta system?
    (A) Iltutmish (B) Balban (C) Alauddin Khalji (D) Firoz Shah
    Answer: (A) Iltutmish
    Explanation: Granted lands (Iqta) to nobles in lieu of salary and service.

  8. Under the Iqta system, the holder of an Iqta was called —
    (A) Amil (B) Muqti (C) Mansabdar (D) Jagirdar
    Answer: (B) Muqti
    Explanation: Muqti collected taxes and maintained law in the province.

  9. Who was the first Sultan to separate military and civil functions of the Iqta?
    (A) Balban (B) Alauddin Khalji (C) Ghiyasuddin Tughlaq (D) Muhammad bin Tughlaq
    Answer: (B) Alauddin Khalji
    Explanation: He curbed nobles’ power by separating administrative functions.

  10. Law of succession during the Delhi Sultanate was —
    (A) Strictly hereditary (B) By election (C) By nomination and military approval (D) Decided by clergy
    Answer: (C) By nomination and military approval
    Explanation: Sultan’s successor was chosen by nobles or army, not strictly hereditary.

  11. The local officer responsible for village revenue was —
    (A) Patwari (B) Muqaddam (C) Amil (D) Qanungo
    Answer: (A) Patwari
    Explanation: Maintained records of land and revenue at village level.

  12. The officer in charge of law and order in towns was —
    (A) Kotwal (B) Qazi (C) Amil (D) Muqti
    Answer: (A) Kotwal
    Explanation: Maintained policing, market supervision, and public order.

  13. The Sultan who appointed spies (Barids) to supervise officers was —
    (A) Iltutmish (B) Balban (C) Alauddin Khalji (D) Firoz Shah
    Answer: (B) Balban
    Explanation: Created an intelligence network to curb rebellion.

  14. The provincial governor under the Delhi Sultanate was called —
    (A) Subahdar (B) Muqti (C) Mansabdar (D) Zamindar
    Answer: (B) Muqti
    Explanation: Combined administrative and military powers at provincial level.

  15. The Sultanate’s judicial system was based on —
    (A) Hindu Dharmashastra (B) Sharia law (C) British law (D) Customary law only
    Answer: (B) Sharia law
    Explanation: Islamic law interpreted by Qazis governed justice.

  16. Which Sultan introduced the price control and market system?
    (A) Alauddin Khalji (B) Muhammad bin Tughlaq (C) Balban (D) Iltutmish
    Answer: (A) Alauddin Khalji
    Explanation: Regulated prices of essential goods and wages.

  17. The Sultanate’s official language was —
    (A) Arabic (B) Persian (C) Hindi (D) Urdu
    Answer: (B) Persian
    Explanation: Used for administration, record-keeping, and court culture.

  18. Who introduced the post of Amir-i-Kohi (supervisor of agriculture)?
    (A) Alauddin Khalji (B) Muhammad bin Tughlaq (C) Firoz Shah Tughlaq (D) Balban
    Answer: (B) Muhammad bin Tughlaq
    Explanation: Appointed to improve agriculture and irrigation.

  19. Firoz Shah Tughlaq’s main contribution was —
    (A) Abolition of taxes (B) Establishment of canals and welfare works (C) New currency (D) Market regulation
    Answer: (B) Establishment of canals and welfare works
    Explanation: Built canals for irrigation and promoted public works.

  20. Which Sultan established hereditary nobility?
    (A) Balban (B) Firoz Shah Tughlaq (C) Alauddin Khalji (D) Iltutmish
    Answer: (B) Firoz Shah Tughlaq
    Explanation: Made offices hereditary, weakening central control.


⚖️ SECTION B – Sher Shah & Mughal Administration (21–50)

  1. Sher Shah’s empire was divided into —
    (A) Iqtas (B) Sarkars (C) Subahs (D) Jagirs
    Answer: (B) Sarkars
    Explanation: Sarkar → Pargana → Village hierarchy used for administration.

  2. Who introduced the silver ‘Rupiya’?
    (A) Babur (B) Sher Shah Suri (C) Akbar (D) Aurangzeb
    Answer: (B) Sher Shah Suri
    Explanation: The standard silver coin became basis of later Indian currency.

  3. Sher Shah’s land revenue system was based on —
    (A) Measurement of land (B) Crop yield guess (C) Past revenue records (D) Military needs
    Answer: (A) Measurement of land
    Explanation: Measured fields and classified soil fertility.

  4. The emperor who first introduced ‘Chehra’ and ‘Dagh’ system for soldiers was —
    (A) Alauddin Khalji (B) Sher Shah (C) Akbar (D) Muhammad bin Tughlaq
    Answer: (A) Alauddin Khalji
    Explanation: ‘Chehra’ (descriptive rolls), ‘Dagh’ (horse branding) ensured discipline.

  5. Akbar introduced which administrative system?
    (A) Mansabdari (B) Iqta (C) Feudal (D) Zamindari
    Answer: (A) Mansabdari
    Explanation: Nobles ranked by Zat and Sawar.

  6. The revenue system devised by Todar Mal was called —
    (A) Zabti (B) Dahsala (C) Batai (D) Kankut
    Answer: (B) Dahsala
    Explanation: Based on 10-year average of yields.

  7. The Mughal emperor who promoted religious tolerance through Sulh-i-Kul —
    (A) Akbar (B) Jahangir (C) Shah Jahan (D) Aurangzeb
    Answer: (A) Akbar
    Explanation: Promoted peace among all faiths.

  8. The military head in Mughal central administration was —
    (A) Mir Bakshi (B) Mir Saman (C) Sadr (D) Wazir
    Answer: (A) Mir Bakshi
    Explanation: Managed mansabdars and army records.

  9. The department of finance under Mughals was called —
    (A) Diwan-i-Wizarat (B) Diwan-i-Arz (C) Diwan-i-Insha (D) Diwan-i-Riyasat
    Answer: (A) Diwan-i-Wizarat
    Explanation: Headed by Wazir; supervised revenue and expenditure.

  10. Jagirdar’s main duty was —
    (A) Tax collection (B) Law making (C) Trade (D) Justice
    Answer: (A) Tax collection
    Explanation: Collected revenue from jagir (assigned land).

  11. Which Mughal system led to later financial crisis?
    (A) Mansabdari (B) Jagirdari (C) Ryotwari (D) Zamindari
    Answer: (B) Jagirdari
    Explanation: Excess mansabdars led to jagir shortage in 17th century.

  12. Akbar’s ‘Zabt’ system was applicable in —
    (A) All India (B) Core fertile areas (C) Deccan (D) Bengal only
    Answer: (B) Core fertile areas
    Explanation: Applied where regular surveys were possible.

  13. The governor of a Mughal province was called —
    (A) Subahdar (B) Nazim (C) Tarafdar (D) Muqti
    Answer: (A) Subahdar
    Explanation: Controlled provincial administration and military.

  14. Provincial administration under Mughals had —
    (A) Subah → Sarkar → Pargana → Village (B) Iqta → Fief → Village (C) Circle → Subah (D) Janapada → Gram
    Answer: (A) Subah → Sarkar → Pargana → Village.

  15. Akbar’s revenue minister was —
    (A) Raja Todar Mal (B) Man Singh (C) Birbal (D) Abul Fazl
    Answer: (A) Raja Todar Mal.

  16. Under Mughals, Jagirdars were transferred —
    (A) Every 3 years (B) Every year (C) Once in 12 years (D) Fixed for life
    Answer: (A) Every 3 years
    Explanation: Rotation prevented feudal independence.

  17. Mir Saman in Mughal court was responsible for —
    (A) Household and stores (B) Finance (C) Military (D) Justice
    Answer: (A) Household and stores
    Explanation: Managed royal household, karkhanas, and gifts.

  18. The Qazi-ul-Quzat was —
    (A) Chief judge (B) Military head (C) Tax collector (D) Religious teacher
    Answer: (A) Chief judge
    Explanation: Supervised Qazis in provinces.

  19. During whose reign did the Mansabdari system get over-expanded and decline?
    (A) Akbar (B) Jahangir (C) Shah Jahan (D) Aurangzeb
    Answer: (D) Aurangzeb
    Explanation: Too many mansabdars, not enough jagirs.

  20. The Mughal emperor who introduced the Ilahi era —
    (A) Akbar (B) Humayun (C) Shah Jahan (D) Aurangzeb
    Answer: (A) Akbar
    Explanation: Started in 1582 CE with Din-i-Ilahi.

  21. The Mughal central administration was mainly —
    (A) Feudal (B) Bureaucratic and centralized (C) Democratic (D) Federal
    Answer: (B) Bureaucratic and centralized.

  22. ‘Karkhana’ during the Mughal period referred to —
    (A) Military camps (B) Royal workshops (C) Agricultural farms (D) Market yards
    Answer: (B) Royal workshops.

  23. Who was known for maintaining a register of revenue and expenditure called ‘Dastur-ul-Amal’?
    (A) Todar Mal (B) Abul Fazl (C) Aurangzeb (D) Jahangir
    Answer: (A) Todar Mal.

  24. Akbar divided his empire into —
    (A) 12 Subahs (B) 15 Subahs (C) 17 Subahs (D) 20 Subahs
    Answer: (A) 12 Subahs initially.

  25. Under the Mughals, Batai system meant —
    (A) Crop-share assessment (B) Cash assessment (C) Land tax (D) Military levy
    Answer: (A) Crop-share assessment.

  26. Who introduced the post of Mir Bahr (Port Officer)?
    (A) Sher Shah (B) Akbar (C) Aurangzeb (D) Jahangir
    Answer: (A) Sher Shah
    Explanation: Controlled ports and maritime trade.

  27. Faujdars were responsible for —
    (A) Law and order (B) Education (C) Trade (D) Religion
    Answer: (A) Law and order.

  28. ‘Zamindars’ under Mughals were —
    (A) Hereditary intermediaries (B) Government officials only (C) Tenants (D) Peasants
    Answer: (A) Hereditary intermediaries.

  29. Main difference between Mansabdari and Jagirdari —
    (A) Mansab = Rank, Jagir = Land assignment (B) Both same (C) Mansab hereditary (D) Jagir was cash salary
    Answer: (A) Mansab = Rank, Jagir = Land assignment.

  30. Under Sher Shah, the chief judicial officer was —
    (A) Qazi-ul-Quzat (B) Wazir (C) Sadr (D) Diwan
    Answer: (A) Qazi-ul-Quzat.

🏯 SECTION C – Deccan & Maratha Administration (51–70)

  1. The Vijayanagara kingdom was founded by —
    (A) Krishnadeva Raya (B) Harihara and Bukka (C) Narasimha Deva (D) Deva Raya II
    Answer: (B) Harihara and Bukka
    Explanation: They founded the empire in 1336 CE under the Sangama dynasty.


  1. The capital of Vijayanagara Empire was —
    (A) Bidar (B) Hampi (C) Golconda (D) Warangal
    Answer: (B) Hampi
    Explanation: Hampi, on the Tungabhadra river, became a major cultural and economic hub.


  1. Vijayanagara Empire was divided into —
    (A) Provinces called Rajyas (B) Provinces called Nadus (C) Iqtas (D) Mandalas
    Answer: (B) Provinces called Nadus
    Explanation: Administrative divisions were Rajya → Nadu → Sthala → Grama.


  1. The king of Vijayanagara was assisted by —
    (A) Ashta Pradhan (B) Council of ministers (C) Subedars (D) Nawabs
    Answer: (B) Council of ministers
    Explanation: The king was supreme, assisted by a council handling different departments.


  1. Krishnadeva Raya belonged to which dynasty?
    (A) Sangama (B) Saluva (C) Tuluva (D) Aravidu
    Answer: (C) Tuluva
    Explanation: The most famous ruler of the Tuluva dynasty; his reign (1509–1529) was the empire’s golden age.


  1. The Vijayanagara revenue system was based on —
    (A) Share of produce (B) Land measurement (C) Cash assessment (D) Military collection
    Answer: (A) Share of produce
    Explanation: The state generally took 1/6th of the produce as tax.


  1. The Bahmani Sultanate was founded by —
    (A) Alauddin Hasan Gangu (B) Mahmud Gawan (C) Yusuf Adil Shah (D) Quli Qutb Shah
    Answer: (A) Alauddin Hasan Gangu
    Explanation: He established the Bahmani kingdom in 1347 CE with capital at Gulbarga.


  1. The capital of Bahmani kingdom was later shifted from Gulbarga to —
    (A) Bidar (B) Bijapur (C) Berar (D) Golkonda
    Answer: (A) Bidar
    Explanation: Later rulers made Bidar the capital for administrative convenience.


  1. Mahmud Gawan was famous for —
    (A) Religious reforms (B) Military conquests (C) Administrative and educational reforms (D) Maritime trade
    Answer: (C) Administrative and educational reforms
    Explanation: As prime minister, he reorganized provinces and established a madrasa in Bidar.


  1. The Bahmani administrative head was called —
    (A) Peshwa (B) Wazir (C) Amil (D) Mir Bakshi
    Answer: (B) Wazir
    Explanation: The Wazir or Peshwa headed finance and civil administration.


  1. Provincial heads under the Bahmani kingdom were known as —
    (A) Tarafdars (B) Mansabdars (C) Muqtis (D) Jagirdars
    Answer: (A) Tarafdars
    Explanation: They governed Tarafs (provinces) and collected revenues.


  1. Which system of administration did the Bahmani rulers adopt from the Delhi Sultanate?
    (A) Iqta system (B) Zamindari (C) Ryotwari (D) Mansabdari
    Answer: (A) Iqta system
    Explanation: Adopted from the northern model for land revenue.


  1. Shivaji’s council of eight ministers was called —
    (A) Ashta Pradhan (B) Sabha (C) Panchayat (D) Durbar
    Answer: (A) Ashta Pradhan
    Explanation: Council formed the core of Maratha administration.


  1. The Peshwa in Shivaji’s administration functioned as —
    (A) Commander (B) Chief Minister (C) Priest (D) Treasurer
    Answer: (B) Chief Minister
    Explanation: The Peshwa was the head of civil administration and chief adviser.


  1. The officer in charge of intelligence and record-keeping in Shivaji’s council was —
    (A) Amatya (B) Mantri (C) Sachiv (D) Sumant
    Answer: (B) Mantri
    Explanation: The Mantri handled intelligence, espionage, and state records.


  1. Who was the finance minister in Shivaji’s council?
    (A) Amatya (B) Panditrao (C) Senapati (D) Nyayadhish
    Answer: (A) Amatya
    Explanation: The Amatya managed accounts, audit, and treasury.


  1. The foreign affairs of Maratha state were managed by —
    (A) Sumant / Dabir (B) Nyayadhish (C) Senapati (D) Sachiv
    Answer: (A) Sumant / Dabir
    Explanation: Handled correspondence and diplomacy with other states.


  1. In Shivaji’s administration, the head of the army was known as —
    (A) Peshwa (B) Senapati (C) Amatya (D) Kotwal
    Answer: (B) Senapati
    Explanation: Commanded military operations and defense.


  1. The Maratha administrative structure was —
    (A) Decentralized with local self-government (B) Centralized monarchy (C) Clerical (D) Military dictatorship
    Answer: (A) Decentralized with local self-government
    Explanation: Strong local officers (Deshmukh, Patil, Kulkarni) functioned efficiently.


  1. The highest civil and religious authority in Maratha administration was —
    (A) Panditrao (B) Nyayadhish (C) Peshwa (D) Chhatrapati
    Answer: (A) Panditrao
    Explanation: The Panditrao oversaw religious charities and ensured moral conduct.


🌾 SECTION D – Agrarian Structure & Rural Economy (71–85)

  1. The main source of state revenue during the Sultanate and Mughal periods was —
    (A) Customs (B) Land revenue (C) Jizya (D) Trade tax
    Answer: (B) Land revenue
    Explanation: Constituted nearly two-thirds of total income.


  1. The person responsible for village record-keeping was —
    (A) Muqaddam (B) Patwari (C) Zamindar (D) Amil
    Answer: (B) Patwari
    Explanation: Maintained village-level revenue and cultivation data.


  1. The term Kankut refers to —
    (A) Measurement of land by crop estimation (B) Irrigation technique (C) Coin minting (D) Military practice
    Answer: (A) Measurement of land by crop estimation
    Explanation: Used to estimate yield for revenue.


  1. ‘Batai’ method of revenue assessment was based on —
    (A) Division of produce between state and peasant (B) Land fertility only (C) Military strength (D) Rent per area
    Answer: (A) Division of produce between state and peasant
    Explanation: The produce was physically divided after harvest.


  1. The canal irrigation system was first developed extensively by —
    (A) Alauddin Khalji (B) Firoz Shah Tughlaq (C) Sher Shah (D) Akbar
    Answer: (B) Firoz Shah Tughlaq
    Explanation: Built canals from Yamuna, Ghaggar, and Sutlej rivers.


  1. Loans given to peasants during famines or crop failures were called —
    (A) Zakat (B) Taccavi (C) Khiraj (D) Ushr
    Answer: (B) Taccavi
    Explanation: State advanced loans for seeds and cultivation.


  1. Under Mughals, the land revenue was generally —
    (A) 1/2 of produce (B) 1/3 of produce (C) 1/6 of produce (D) Fixed rent
    Answer: (B) 1/3 of produce
    Explanation: This was the standard state share.


  1. Peasants under Mughal rule were known as —
    (A) Raiyat (B) Zamindars (C) Jagirdars (D) Karkun
    Answer: (A) Raiyat
    Explanation: They cultivated land and paid revenue.


  1. The peasant revolts in Mughal period were mostly caused by —
    (A) Over-taxation and exploitation (B) Religious conversion (C) Military recruitment (D) Foreign invasions
    Answer: (A) Over-taxation and exploitation.


  1. Which emperor encouraged agricultural expansion in Bengal by reclaiming forests?
    (A) Akbar (B) Jahangir (C) Shah Jahan (D) Aurangzeb
    Answer: (C) Shah Jahan
    Explanation: Expansion into Bengal delta increased productivity.


  1. Irrigation tanks and wells were characteristic of —
    (A) Northern India (B) Deccan and South India (C) Punjab only (D) Bengal only
    Answer: (B) Deccan and South India
    Explanation: Due to rainfall variation, tanks and reservoirs were vital.


  1. Famine relief was a duty of —
    (A) Zamindar (B) Local officials (C) Emperor only (D) Merchants
    Answer: (A) Zamindar
    Explanation: They distributed food and taccavi loans locally.


  1. Village headmen in Mughal India were known as —
    (A) Muqaddam (B) Patwari (C) Jagirdar (D) Subahdar
    Answer: (A) Muqaddam
    Explanation: Represented peasants and helped in revenue collection.


  1. Agricultural productivity was highest in —
    (A) Deccan (B) Doab region (C) Punjab hills (D) Bengal forests
    Answer: (B) Doab region
    Explanation: Fertile area between Ganga and Yamuna rivers.


  1. Frequent famines occurred due to —
    (A) Poor rainfall and wars (B) High literacy (C) Religious conflicts (D) Land surplus
    Answer: (A) Poor rainfall and wars.


💰 SECTION E – Industry, Trade, and Finance (86–100)

  1. Major textile centre during Mughal India —
    (A) Delhi (B) Surat (C) Lucknow (D) Ajmer
    Answer: (B) Surat
    Explanation: Key port and textile hub for domestic and overseas trade.


  1. The famous cotton textile city ‘Dacca’ was known for —
    (A) Woolen cloth (B) Muslin (C) Brocade (D) Silk
    Answer: (B) Muslin
    Explanation: Fine muslin of Bengal was world-famous.


  1. Royal factories or workshops were known as —
    (A) Karkhanas (B) Mandis (C) Hattas (D) Qasbahs
    Answer: (A) Karkhanas
    Explanation: Produced textiles, arms, jewelry, furniture for the court.


  1. Main foreign traders in India during Akbar’s time —
    (A) British (B) Portuguese (C) French (D) Dutch
    Answer: (B) Portuguese
    Explanation: They dominated maritime trade in the 16th century.


  1. English East India Company established its first factory at —
    (A) Madras (B) Surat (C) Calcutta (D) Bombay
    Answer: (B) Surat
    Explanation: In 1613 CE with permission from Jahangir.


  1. The Indian term ‘Hundi’ refers to —
    (A) Land deed (B) Bill of exchange (C) Tax receipt (D) Royal grant
    Answer: (B) Bill of exchange
    Explanation: Used by merchants for secure money transfer.


  1. Insurance of goods in medieval India was known as —
    (A) Bima (B) Nankar (C) Chauth (D) Rahdari
    Answer: (A) Bima
    Explanation: Traders insured their merchandise against loss or piracy.


  1. Main export commodities during Mughal period —
    (A) Spices, textiles, indigo, saltpetre (B) Gold, silk, silver (C) Machinery (D) Wool
    Answer: (A) Spices, textiles, indigo, saltpetre.


  1. Important port of Bengal during Mughal period —
    (A) Hooghly (B) Calicut (C) Cochin (D) Masulipatnam
    Answer: (A) Hooghly
    Explanation: Major trading port under Portuguese and later Mughals.


  1. Grand Trunk Road was reconstructed by —
    (A) Akbar (B) Sher Shah Suri (C) Aurangzeb (D) Jahangir
    Answer: (B) Sher Shah Suri
    Explanation: Connected Sonargaon to Peshawar for trade and movement.


  1. The major source of Mughal revenue was —
    (A) Trade duties (B) Land revenue (C) Tribute (D) Mines
    Answer: (B) Land revenue.


  1. Mughal currency of copper coin was called —
    (A) Dam (B) Rupiya (C) Mohur (D) Tankha
    Answer: (A) Dam
    Explanation: Smaller denomination of the rupee.


  1. Gold coin under the Mughals was called —
    (A) Mohur (B) Ashrafi (C) Dam (D) Dinar
    Answer: (A) Mohur
    Explanation: 1 Mohur ≈ 15 silver rupees.


  1. Mint towns during Mughal rule included —
    (A) Delhi, Lahore, Surat, Ahmedabad (B) Kabul, Kashmir, Goa, Lucknow (C) Only Delhi (D) Multan and Patna only
    Answer: (A) Delhi, Lahore, Surat, Ahmedabad
    Explanation: Important centres for coin minting and trade.


  1. A major cause of peasant revolts under Aurangzeb was —
    (A) Religious persecution (B) Excessive taxation and jagirdar oppression (C) European trade (D) Weak local governance
    Answer: (B) Excessive taxation and jagirdar oppression
    Explanation: Heavy revenue demand and corruption led to Jat, Satnami, and Sikh uprisings.

👋Subscribe to
ProTeacher.in

Sign up to receive NewsLetters in your inbox.

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.