Overview

Previous Year UPSC-CSE Questions By the end you will be able to draft model answers for the following UPSC questions. Each question carries a collapsible framework showing how to approach it in the exam.

  1. UPSC Mains 2017 GS-IThe women's questions arose in modern India as a part of the 19th century social reform movement. What are the major issues and debates concerning women in that period?
    How to structure the answer in the exam

    Directive verb: Discuss · Approach: Set out the major issues, then the legislative milestones, then the debates and the limits.

    Introduction: Open with the woman question as the heart of the nineteenth-century social reform movement.

    Body (sub-themes to develop):

    • The issues: Sati, widow remarriage, female infanticide, child marriage, education.
    • The legislation: Sati 1829, Widow Remarriage Act 1856, Age of Consent Act 1891.
    • The debates: reform by law versus custom; the Rakhmabai case and the age of consent.
    • The reformers and the limits: Vidyasagar, Ramabai, Tarabai Shinde, Malabari; uneven reach.

    Conclusion: Conclude that the woman question reshaped reform but its gains in custom were slow.

  2. UPSC Prelims 2020 GS Paper IIn the context of Indian history, the Rakhmabai case of 1884 revolved around
    1. Women's right to gain education
    2. Age of consent
    3. Restitution of conjugal rights

    Select the correct answer using the code given below.

    1. a 1 and 2 only
    2. b 2 and 3 only
    3. c 1 and 3 only
    4. d 1, 2 and 3
    How to approach this Prelims question

    Question type: Multi-statement (what it revolved around)

    Approach: Recall what the Rakhmabai case actually concerned.

    Trap to watch: The Rakhmabai case was about restitution of conjugal rights and the age of consent, NOT the right to education. So 2 and 3 only.

    Key facts to recall:

    • Rakhmabai case 1884: restitution of conjugal rights
    • It fed the age of consent debate
    • Not about the right to education

    Answer signal: Statements 2 and 3 only, so option (b).

  3. UPSC Prelims 2025 GS Paper IWho among the following was the founder of the ‘Self-Respect Movement’?
    1. a ‘Periyar’ E. V. Ramaswamy Naicker
    2. b Dr. B. R. Ambedkar
    3. c Bhaskarrao Jadhav
    4. d Dinkarrao Javalkar
    How to approach this Prelims question

    Question type: Single correct

    Approach: Recall the leader of the non-Brahmin Self-Respect Movement in the south.

    Trap to watch: The Self-Respect Movement was founded by Periyar E. V. Ramaswamy Naicker, not by Ambedkar (who led the Mahad and Depressed Classes movements).

    Key facts to recall:

    • Self-Respect Movement: Periyar E. V. Ramaswamy Naicker
    • Non-Brahmin reform in the south
    • Part of the anti-caste tradition from Phule

    Answer signal: Periyar, so option (a).

The reform of the nineteenth century was not confined to Hindu Bengal. Social reform movements arose in every community: among Muslims, the modern education of Sir Syed Ahmad Khan at Aligarh and the orthodox revival of Deoband; among Sikhs, the Singh Sabha and the Kuka movement; and against caste, the Satyashodhak Samaj of Jyotirao Phule and the work of Sri Narayana Guru in the south. Running through them all was the woman question, the long struggle, from the abolition of Sati to the Age of Consent Act, to remake the lives of Indian women.

Introduction: Reform across the Communities

Reform in Every Faith and Community

Why this matters: the awakening of the nineteenth century touched every community, not the Hindu reformers of Bengal alone. Muslims, Sikhs and the lower castes each produced their own movements, blending a revival of the faith with a demand for social change.

What is the significance of this theme: across all of them ran the woman question, the effort to end Sati, child marriage and the subjection of women. The panel below sets out the chief community reform movements.

Reform across the CommunitiesMuslim, Sikh and anti-caste reform movements of the nineteenth centuryAligarhSir Syed Ahmad Khan;modern Westerneducation for MuslimsDeobandDarul Uloom, 1866;orthodox revival andtraditional learningFaraiziHaji Shariatullah;reform among the Muslimpeasants of BengalSingh SabhaSikh revival, 1873;Khalsa schools anda guard against conversionKuka (Namdhari)Baba Ram Singh; Sikhreform and an earlyanti-British protestSatyashodhak SamajJyotirao Phule, 1873;against caste and forthe lower castesEach community produced its own reform, blending revival of the faith with social change.
Figure 1. Reform across the communities.

The Aligarh and Deoband Movements

Modern Education and Orthodox Revival

What is the significance of the Aligarh movement: led by Sir Syed Ahmad Khan, it sought to reconcile the Muslim community with modern Western and scientific learning. He founded the Mohammadan Anglo-Oriental College at Aligarh in 1875, the seed of the later Aligarh Muslim University, and urged loyalty to the British as the path to advancement.

Distinguishing the Deoband response: the Darul Uloom at Deoband, founded in 1866, took the opposite road. It stood for an orthodox revival of Islam and traditional learning, was suspicious of Western culture, and was anti-British in its politics. The two responses are contrasted below.

Two Responses: Aligarh and DeobandModern education and loyalty versus orthodox revival and resistanceThe Aligarh movementSir Syed Ahmad KhanModern Western andscientific educationThe MAO College, 1875Loyal to the BritishThe Deoband movementFounded 1866Orthodox Islamicrevival and learningSuspicious of the WestAnti-British in politicsBoth sought to renew Muslim life, but pulled in opposite directions on the West and the British.
Figure 2. Two responses: Aligarh and Deoband.

The Tariqah-i-Muhammadiyah and the Faraizi Movement

Revival and Reform among the Muslim Peasantry

What is the significance of these movements: they were revivalist currents among ordinary Muslims, often wrongly labelled Wahabi by the British. The Tariqah-i-Muhammadiyah of Sayyid Ahmad of Rae Bareli called for a return to a purified Islam and, in the north-west, took the form of armed struggle.

Distinguishing the Faraizi movement: founded by Haji Shariatullah in East Bengal and led after him by his son Dudu Miyan, it combined religious reform with the grievances of the Muslim peasantry against oppressive zamindars and indigo planters, so joining faith to a social and agrarian cause.

The Singh Sabha, the Kuka Movement and Sikh Revival

The Renewal of the Sikh Faith

What is the significance of the Singh Sabha: founded in 1873, it led the revival of the Sikh faith. It worked to purify Sikh practice, to defend it against conversion to Christianity and to other faiths, and to spread modern education through the Khalsa schools and colleges.

Distinguishing the Kuka movement: the Kuka, or Namdhari, movement, led by Baba Ram Singh, began as a movement of religious and social reform among the Sikhs and grew into one of the earliest forms of anti-British protest in Punjab, with its boycott of British goods and institutions.

The Anti-Caste and Non-Brahmin Movements

Phule, Narayana Guru and the Dignity of the Lower Castes

What is the significance of the anti-caste movements: they challenged the very basis of the old social order. Jyotirao Phule, with his wife Savitribai, attacked Brahminical dominance and the oppression of the lower castes, founded the Satyashodhak Samaj in 1873, and opened among the first schools for girls and for the so-called untouchables; his work Gulamgiri set out the case.

Distinguishing the wider movement: in the south, Sri Narayana Guru preached one caste, one religion and one God and inspired the SNDP movement among the Ezhavas of Kerala, while later the Self-Respect Movement of Periyar E. V. Ramaswamy Naicker carried the non-Brahmin cause forward, a struggle that ran on from Phule to Ambedkar. The reformers are set out below.

The Anti-Caste and Non-Brahmin MovementsFrom Jyotirao Phule onward, a struggle for the dignity of the lower castesJyotirao PhulePioneer of anti-castereform; the workGulamgiri, 1873Savitribai PhuleA pioneer of womeneducation; among thefirst girls schoolsSatyashodhak SamajFounded 1873; truth-seekers againstBrahmin dominanceSri Narayana GuruKerala; one caste,one religion, one God;the SNDP movementPeriyarThe Self-RespectMovement; non-Brahminreform in the southThe long struggleFrom Phule to Ambedkar,a continuing fightagainst casteThe anti-caste movements challenged the very basis of the old social order.
Figure 3. The anti-caste and non-Brahmin movements.

The Woman Question and Social Legislation

The Major Issues and Debates concerning Women

What is the significance of the woman question: it arose as the very heart of the nineteenth-century reform movement. The great issues were Sati, abolished in 1829, the remarriage of widows, won in the Hindu Widows Remarriage Act of 1856 through the campaign of Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar, female infanticide, child marriage and the education of women.

Distinguishing the great debates: the sharpest was over the age of consent. The Rakhmabai case of 1884 turned on the restitution of conjugal rights and the age of consent, and the Age of Consent Act of 1891, pressed by B. M. Malabari, raised the age of marriage and provoked a fierce debate, with Tilak opposing it as interference in custom. Pandita Ramabai and Tarabai Shinde gave the cause a powerful Indian voice. The timeline below sets out the laws.

The Woman Question, 1829 to 1891Reform by law and the great debates over the lives of women1829Sati abolishedBentinck and Ram Mohan Roy1856Widow Remarriage ActVidyasagar campaigns1872Native Marriage ActCivil marriage allowed1884The Rakhmabai caseConjugal rights, age ofconsent1891Age of Consent ActMalabari; opposed by TilakEach law was won against fierce resistance, and each opened a wider debate on reform and custom.
Figure 4. The woman question, 1829 to 1891.

Significance: The Reach and Limits of Social Reform

What the Community and Women's Reform Achieved

What is the significance of these reforms together: they carried the awakening into every community and to the most vulnerable. They renewed the Muslim and Sikh faiths, challenged the caste order at its root, and won real protection for women in law, from widow remarriage to the age of consent.

Distinguishing the limits: yet reform was often uneven and contested. The new laws ran ahead of social custom and were widely evaded; reform within one community sometimes sharpened the line against another; and the lives of most women and most lower-caste Indians changed only slowly. The reformers and debates are set out below.

The Woman Question: Reformers and DebatesThe campaigners and the issues that defined the cause of womenIshwar Chandra VidyasagarWidow remarriage andfemale education; theAct of 1856Pandita RamabaiWomen education; theSharada Sadan and theArya Mahila SamajTarabai ShindeStri Purush Tulana,1882; an earlyfeminist critiqueB. M. MalabariCampaigned for theAge of Consent Actof 1891The legislationSati 1829, WidowRemarriage 1856, Ageof Consent 1891The debateReform by law versussocial custom; thelimits of reformThe woman question was the heart of the social reform movement of the nineteenth century.
Figure 5. The woman question: reformers and debates.

The Legacy of the Reform Era

Contemporary linkages run from this reform straight into the national and social movements of the next century. The anti-caste struggle of Phule would lead on to Ambedkar, the woman question to the women's movement, and the renewal of every community to a sharper sense of identity, for good and for ill.

The larger significance is that the reform movements, together with the Bengal Renaissance, were the social foundation of modern India. The table and points below gather the threads, and the next part turns to education and the press, the instruments through which the new ideas spread.

Table 1. Reform across the communities and the woman question.
Sphere Movement or law Leader
Muslim education The Aligarh movement, MAO College 1875 Sir Syed Ahmad Khan
Muslim orthodoxy Darul Uloom, Deoband, 1866 Deoband ulema
Sikh revival The Singh Sabha, 1873 Singh Sabha leaders
Anti-caste reform The Satyashodhak Samaj, 1873 Jyotirao Phule
The woman question Widow Remarriage 1856; Age of Consent 1891 Vidyasagar; Malabari
  • Sir Syed Ahmad Khan led modern Muslim education at Aligarh; Deoband (1866) led the orthodox revival.
  • The Faraizi movement joined religious reform to the grievances of the Bengal Muslim peasantry.
  • The Singh Sabha (1873) led the Sikh revival; the Kuka movement turned reform into anti-British protest.
  • Jyotirao and Savitribai Phule and the Satyashodhak Samaj (1873) led the anti-caste movement; Narayana Guru in the south.
  • The woman question, from the Widow Remarriage Act 1856 to the Age of Consent Act 1891, was central to reform.

Prelims MCQ practice

Each question below tests one specific concept on the topic. Click to reveal the answer and a full option-wise explanation.

Q1. The Mohammadan Anglo-Oriental College at Aligarh, the seed of the later Aligarh Muslim University, was founded by:

  1. Maulana Abul Kalam Azad
  2. Sir Syed Ahmad Khan
  3. Badruddin Tyabji
  4. Muhammad Qasim Nanautavi
Show answer and explanation

Answer: Sir Syed Ahmad Khan

Explanation.

Option (b) is correct. The MAO College at Aligarh was founded by Sir Syed Ahmad Khan in 1875. Hence option (b).

Q2. The Satyashodhak Samaj, founded in 1873 to fight caste oppression, was established by:

  1. Sri Narayana Guru
  2. Jyotirao Phule
  3. B. R. Ambedkar
  4. Periyar E. V. Ramaswamy
Show answer and explanation

Answer: Jyotirao Phule

Explanation.

Option (b) is correct. The Satyashodhak Samaj was founded in 1873 by Jyotirao Phule. Hence option (b).

Q3. The Darul Uloom at Deoband, founded in 1866, stood for:

  1. modern Western and scientific education
  2. orthodox Islamic revival and traditional learning
  3. the abolition of caste among Muslims
  4. loyalty to the British in all things
Show answer and explanation

Answer: orthodox Islamic revival and traditional learning

Explanation.

Option (b) is correct. Deoband stood for an orthodox revival of Islam and traditional learning, in contrast to the modern education of Aligarh. Hence option (b).

Q4. The Age of Consent Act, which raised the age of marriage and was opposed by Tilak as interference in custom, was passed in:

  1. 1856
  2. 1872
  3. 1891
  4. 1929
Show answer and explanation

Answer: 1891

Explanation.

Option (c) is correct. The Age of Consent Act was passed in 1891, pressed by B. M. Malabari. Hence option (c).

Q5. Consider the following statements about Sikh reform:

  1. The Singh Sabha movement began in 1873.
  2. The Kuka (Namdhari) movement was led by Baba Ram Singh.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

  1. 1 only
  2. 2 only
  3. Both 1 and 2
  4. Neither 1 nor 2
Show answer and explanation

Answer: Both 1 and 2

Explanation.

Both statements are correct: the Singh Sabha began in 1873, and the Kuka (Namdhari) movement was led by Baba Ram Singh. Hence option (c).

Q6. The Faraizi movement among the Muslim peasantry of Bengal was founded by:

  1. Sayyid Ahmad of Rae Bareli
  2. Haji Shariatullah
  3. Sir Syed Ahmad Khan
  4. Dudu Miyan
Show answer and explanation

Answer: Haji Shariatullah

Explanation.

Option (b) is correct. The Faraizi movement was founded by Haji Shariatullah and later led by his son Dudu Miyan. Hence option (b).

Sources and Further Reading

Editorial Disclaimer

This article is prepared for UPSC examination preparation. Verify key facts and interpretations against standard reference histories before relying on them.

Part 13 of 18 · Modern India to 1885

All 18 parts in this cluster
  1. 1 Part 1: Decline of the Mughal Empire and Eighteenth-Century India
  2. 2 Part 2: The Rise of the Regional States in Eighteenth-Century India
  3. 3 Part 3: The Advent of the Europeans in India
  4. 4 Part 4: The Carnatic Wars and the British Conquest of Bengal
  5. 5 Part 5: British Expansion I: The Conquest of Mysore and the Marathas
  6. 6 Part 6: British Expansion II: Punjab, the Frontiers and Consolidation
  7. 7 Part 7: The Colonial Constitutional Framework, 1773 to 1861
  8. 8 Part 8: Governor-Generals I: From Warren Hastings to Lord Bentinck
  9. 9 Part 9: Lord Dalhousie and the Machinery of Modern Administration
  10. 10 Part 10: Land Revenue Systems and the Agrarian Economy
  11. 11 Part 11: Deindustrialisation, the Drain of Wealth and the Famines
  12. 12 Part 12: Socio-Religious Reform I: The Bengal Renaissance and Hindu Reform
  13. 13 Part 13: Socio-Religious Reform II: Muslim, Sikh, Anti-Caste Reform and the Woman Question (this article)
  14. 14 Part 14: Education and the Press under Colonial Rule
  15. 15 Part 15: Tribal and Peasant Uprisings before 1885
  16. 16 Part 16: Early Political Associations and the Road to the Indian National Congress
  17. 17 Part 17: The Revolt of 1857: The Great Watershed
  18. 18 Part 18: Colonialism Assessed: Analytical Themes, Ready-Reckoners and the Verdict