You are currently viewing Complete History for BPSC 72nd 2026
bpsc 72nd

Complete History for BPSC 72nd 2026

BPSC PRELIMS EXAMINATION

History & Culture

Ancient  |  Medieval  |  Modern  |  Bihar Special

Complete Notes · All Relevant Facts · PYQ-aligned · 72st BPSC Ready

Exam Pattern: 150 Marks · Objective Type · General Studies Paper · History carries ~25–30 Marks

bpsc 72nd
bpsc 72nd

PART A:  ANCIENT HISTORY OF INDIA & BIHAR

A1.  Prehistoric India & Stone Age Cultures

Age / PeriodTime FrameKey FeaturesBihar / India Relevance
Palaeolithic (Old Stone Age)5 lakh – 10,000 BCECrude stone tools; hunting-gathering; no agricultureSoan valley, Belan valley; Chotanagpur plateau sites
Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age)10,000 – 6,000 BCEMicroliths; domestication of animals beginsLanghnaj (Gujarat); Bhimbetka (MP) — cave paintings
Neolithic (New Stone Age)6,000 – 1,000 BCEPolished stone tools; agriculture; settled lifeBurzahom (J&K); Chirand (Bihar) — earliest Neolithic site in E. India
Chalcolithic (Copper-Stone Age)3,000 – 1,000 BCECopper + stone tools; painted pottery; pre-HarappanAhar, Kayatha, Malwa, Jorwe cultures
BPSC FACT FLASH
Chirand (Saran district, Bihar): Oldest Neolithic site in Eastern India — bone tools, rice cultivation evidence.
Chalcolithic = Copper Age — also called Eneolithic. Harappan culture is Bronze Age, not Chalcolithic.
BPSC PYQ: “Which period is also known as Chalcolithic Age?” — Copper Age (Ans: c)

A2.  Indus Valley / Harappan Civilisation (2600–1900 BCE)

FeatureDetail
Period2600–1900 BCE (Mature Harappan); Discovered 1921 (Harappa) by Dayaram Sahni
Extent~1.5 million sq km — Punjab to Gujarat; Afghanistan to UP; largest Bronze Age civilisation
Major SitesHarappa (Punjab/Pak), Mohenjo-daro (Sind/Pak), Lothal (Gujarat — dockyard), Dholavira (Gujarat — stadium), Kalibangan (Raj — fire altars), Rakhigarhi (Haryana — largest IVC site in India)
Town PlanningGrid pattern; underground drainage; Great Bath (Mohenjo-daro); Granaries; two-storied buildings of burnt bricks
EconomyTrade-based; weights & measures standardised; no temples found; cotton cultivation; sea trade with Mesopotamia
ScriptUndeciphered; pictographic; written boustrophedon (right to left, then left to right)
ReligionMother Goddess; Pashupati (Proto-Shiva); tree & animal worship; no idol worship evidence
DeclineMultiple theories — Aryan invasion (outdated); climate change/drought (Ghaggar-Hakra drying); floods; tectonic activity
BPSC FACT FLASH
Lothal (Gujarat) — First artificial dockyard in the world; rice cultivation evidence.
Dholavira (Gujarat) — Largest Harappan site in India; UNESCO World Heritage Site (2021).
Rakhigarhi (Haryana) — Largest IVC site in India overall.
No iron, no horse, no temple — three key ‘absences’ in IVC for BPSC.
Cotton = ‘Sindon’ by Greeks; Mesopotamia called India ‘Meluhha’.

A3.  Vedic Age (1500–600 BCE)

AspectRigvedic Period (1500–1000 BCE)Later Vedic Period (1000–600 BCE)
RegionSapta-Sindhu (Punjab, NW)Gangetic plain (east expansion); Bihar included
EconomyPastoral; cattle = wealth; barterAgriculture dominant; iron use (ayas); guilds appear
PolityTribe (Jana); Sabha, Samiti active; Raja = tribal chiefMonarchy stronger; Sabhas decline; Janapadas emerge
ReligionNature worship; Indra, Varuna, Agni main; YajnasPrajapati, Vishnu, Rudra emerge; ritual-heavy; Upanishads
CasteVarna by occupation (fluid)Hereditary varna system; Brahmin dominance
WomenGargi, Maitreyi — educated; widow remarriageDeteriorated status; child marriage begins
Sacred TextsRigveda (oldest; 1028 hymns)Sam, Yajur, Atharva Vedas; Brahmanas; Aranyakas; Upanishads
The 16 Mahajanapadas — BPSC Favourite
Period: 600–300 BCE. Bihar = heartland of Mahajanapadas.
Bihar-related Mahajanapadas: Magadha (Patna/Gaya), Vajji (Vaishali — first republic), Anga (Bhagalpur), Malla (Kushinagar, UP).
Magadha’s rise: Natural advantages — iron ore, forests, fertile Gangetic plains, strategic rivers (Ganga, Son, Gandak, Punpun).
First capital of Magadha: Rajgriha (Rajgir) → later shifted to Pataliputra (Patna) by Udayin.
Vajji (Vaishali): World’s first republican confederation — Lichchhavis + Videhas + other clans. Gautam Buddha delivered last sermon here. Lord Mahavira born here.

A4.  Jainism & Buddhism — Bihar Connection

Jainism

PointDetail
FounderRishabhadeva (1st Tirthankara); Vardhamana Mahavira = 24th Tirthankara
MahaviraBorn at Kundagrama (Vaishali, Bihar), 599 BCE; attained Kaivalya (enlightenment) at Jrimbhikagrama near Rajgir; died at Pawapuri (Bihar), 527 BCE
TriratnaRight Faith (Samyak Shraddha), Right Knowledge (Samyak Jnana), Right Conduct (Samyak Charitra)
Pancha MahavrataNon-violence (Ahimsa), Truth, Non-stealing, Non-possession, Celibacy (Brahmacharya) — added by Mahavira
SectsDigambara (sky-clad; Bhadrabahu) vs Shvetambara (white-clad; Sthulabhadra) — split after Chandragupta Maurya’s time
Patronage in BiharChandragupta Maurya became Digambara Jain monk; went to Karnataka with Bhadrabahu

Buddhism

PointDetail
Gautama BuddhaBorn Lumbini (Nepal), 563 BCE; Kapilavastu (UP) childhood; Enlightenment (Nirvana) at Bodh Gaya (Bihar); First sermon (Dharmachakra Pravartan) at Sarnath (UP); Death (Mahaparinirvana) at Kushinagar (UP), 483 BCE
Four Noble Truths1. Life is suffering (Dukkha) 2. Suffering has cause (Samudaya) 3. Suffering can end (Nirodha) 4. Path to end suffering (Marga)
Eightfold PathRight View, Intent, Speech, Action, Livelihood, Effort, Mindfulness, Concentration — Ashtangika Marga
Buddhist Councils1st: Rajgriha/Rajgir (484 BCE) — Ajatashatru’s patronage; 2nd: Vaishali (383 BCE); 3rd: Pataliputra (250 BCE) — Ashoka’s patronage; 4th: Kashmir (72 CE) — Kanishka
TextsTripitaka (Pali Canon): Vinaya, Sutta, Abhidhamma Pitakas
SectsHinayana (Theravada) — original; Mahayana — Bodhisattva ideal; Vajrayana — tantric Buddhism
BPSC FACT FLASH
Bodh Gaya — Mahabodhi Temple; UNESCO World Heritage Site 2002. Bihar’s most important Buddhist site.
Nalanda — World’s first residential university (5th–12th century CE); Bihar. Destroyed by Bakhtiyar Khilji, 1193 CE.
Vikramshila & Odantapuri — Other important Buddhist universities in Bihar (Pala period).
Vaishali — Birth of Mahavira + Last sermon of Buddha + First republic of world. Triple BPSC significance.

A5.  Mauryan Empire (321–185 BCE) — Bihar’s Golden Age

KingPeriodKey Contributions
Chandragupta Maurya321–297 BCEFounded empire with Chanakya’s help; defeated Dhana Nanda; defeated Seleucus Nicator (305 BCE); first pan-India ruler; capital Pataliputra; became Jain monk
Bindusara297–273 BCECalled ‘Amitrochates’ (killer of enemies) by Greeks; extended empire south; Ajivika sect follower
Ashoka the Great273–232 BCEKalinga War (261 BCE) — turning point; embraced Buddhism; Dhamma policy; rock & pillar edicts; ambassadors to Sri Lanka, Greece, Egypt; Lion Capital = national emblem of India

Ashoka’s Edicts — BPSC Must Know

Edict TypeNumberKey Content & Location
Major Rock Edicts14Dhamma; welfare; religious tolerance; found at Girnar, Sopara, Kalsi, Dhauli, Jaugada, Shahbazgarhi, Mansehra
Minor Rock EdictsMultipleAshoka’s personal conversion to Buddhism; found at Brahmagiri, Maski, Rupnath
Pillar Edicts7 major + 2 minorDhamma; ban on killing certain animals; Lumbini pillar (confirms Buddha’s birthplace)
Separate EdictsKalinga EdictsSeparate edicts for Tosali & Samapa — ‘all men are my children’
Ashoka — BPSC Special Facts
Lion Capital (Sarnath): National Emblem of India. Abacus has bull, horse, elephant, lion separated by dharmachakra.
Brahmi script used in most edicts (deciphered by James Prinsep, 1837). Kharosthi used in NW edicts (Shahbazgarhi, Mansehra).
Dhamma Mahamattas: Officials appointed by Ashoka to spread Dhamma — among world’s first welfare officers.
Pataliputra description: Megasthenes (Greek ambassador to Chandragupta) described it in ‘Indica’ — most populated city of ancient world.
Arthashastra: Written by Chanakya/Kautilya — first treatise on statecraft, economics, and military strategy.

A6.  Post-Mauryan & Gupta Period

Post-Mauryan Dynasties (185 BCE – 320 CE)

DynastyPeriodKey Facts
Shunga185–73 BCEPushyamitra Shunga (Brahmin general); killed last Maurya; Hinduism revived; Sanchi stupa built
Kanva73–28 BCEFollowed Shunga in Magadha
Satavahana1st BCE–3rd CEDeccan rulers; used Prakrit; Gautamiputra Satakarni repelled Shakas
Kushana1st–3rd CEKanishka (78 CE — Shaka Era); patronised Buddhism; Silk Route; Gandhara art (Greek-Buddhist fusion)
Gupta320–550 CESee below

Gupta Empire (320–550 CE) — ‘Golden Age of India’

RulerAchievement
Chandragupta I (320–335 CE)Founded Gupta Empire; married Kumaradevi (Lichchhavi princess of Vaishali); started Gupta Era (319–320 CE)
Samudragupta (335–380 CE)Described as ‘Napoleon of India’ by V.A. Smith; Allahabad Pillar inscription by Harishena; veena player; military conquests
Chandragupta II / Vikramaditya (380–415 CE)Defeated Shakas; title Vikramaditya; Fa-Hien (Chinese pilgrim) visited; Navratnas at court (Kalidasa, Aryabhatta, Varahamihira, Dhanvantari, Amarasimha etc.)
Kumaragupta I (415–455 CE)Founded Nalanda University
Skandagupta (455–467 CE)Repelled Huna invasions; last great Gupta ruler
BPSC FACT FLASH
Aryabhatta (476 CE, Pataliputra): Calculated value of Pi (π = 3.1416); explained solar/lunar eclipses scientifically; Earth rotates on axis; Aryabhatiya (book).
Kalidasa: Shakuntala, Meghaduta, Raghuvamsha, Abhijnana Shakuntalam — greatest Sanskrit poet.
Nalanda University: Founded by Kumaragupta I (~5th century CE) in Bihar. Peak during Harsha and Pala period. Hiuen Tsang studied here.
Fa-Hien (405–411 CE): Chinese pilgrim; visited during Chandragupta II; described Bihar as prosperous, no capital punishment, Buddhism flourishing.

A7.  Post-Gupta Period & Harsha (606–647 CE)

  • Harshavardhana: Capital Kanauj (UP); extended empire to Bihar, Bengal; defeated by Chalukya king Pulakeshin II; last Hindu emperor before Muslim rule.
  • Hiuen Tsang (Xuanzang): Chinese pilgrim visited during Harsha; studied at Nalanda; wrote ‘Si-yu-ki’ (Record of Western World) — important source for Bihar’s history.
  • Banskhera & Madhuban plates: Harsha’s copper plate inscriptions; confirms extent of his empire.
  • Pushyabhuti dynasty: Harsha’s dynasty; his sister Rajyashri was married to Maukhari king.

Pala Dynasty (750–1174 CE) — Bihar’s Buddhist Kings

RulerAchievement
Gopala (750–770 CE)Founded Pala dynasty — elected by people; first elected monarch in India
Dharmapala (770–810 CE)Greatest Pala ruler; patron of Buddhism; founded Vikramshila University (Bhagalpur, Bihar) and Odantapuri (Bihar Sharif)
Devapala (810–850 CE)Expanded empire; patronised Nalanda; ambassador from Srivijaya (SE Asia)
Mahipala I (988–1038 CE)Restored Pala power; renovated Nalanda and Bodh Gaya
BPSC FACT FLASH
Pala dynasty = greatest patrons of Mahayana/Vajrayana Buddhism in India.
Vikramshila University — founded by Dharmapala, Bihar; rival to Nalanda; also destroyed by Bakhtiyar Khilji (1203 CE).
Pala bronze sculptures — among finest in Indian art history; Bihar museums hold major collections.

PART B:  MEDIEVAL HISTORY OF INDIA & BIHAR

B1.  Arab Invasions & Early Turks

  • Muhammad bin Qasim (712 CE): Arab general; conquered Sind (Sindh); first Muslim ruler in India; Umayyad Caliphate.
  • Mahmud of Ghazni (971–1030 CE): 17 raids into India (997–1027 CE); famous for sacking Somnath Temple (1025 CE, Gujarat); plunder motive; Al-Biruni wrote ‘Kitab-ul-Hind’ during his reign.
  • Muhammad Ghori (1173–1206 CE): First Battle of Tarain (1191) — defeated by Prithviraj Chauhan; Second Battle of Tarain (1192) — defeated Prithviraj; laid foundation of Delhi Sultanate.
Bihar & Bakhtiyar Khilji — BPSC Most Important
Bakhtiyar Khilji (1193–1206 CE): General of Muhammad Ghori; conquered Bihar (1193 CE); destroyed Nalanda University, killing monks and burning manuscripts.
Significance: Destroyed Buddhism in Bihar — monks fled to Nepal and Tibet. This ended Buddhism as a mass religion in its homeland.
Vikramshila destroyed: 1203 CE by Bakhtiyar Khilji. Odantapuri also destroyed.
Bengal conquest: Bakhtiyar then conquered Bengal (Nabadwip, 1203 CE); died 1206 CE.

B2.  Delhi Sultanate (1206–1526 CE)

DynastyPeriodKey Rulers & Facts
Slave/Mamluk1206–1290Qutb-ud-din Aibak (Qutub Minar, Dhai Din Ka Jhonpra); Iltutmish (first Sultan recognised by Caliph; daughter Razia Sultan); Balban (iron and blood policy)
Khilji1290–1320Alauddin Khilji — market reforms; military campaigns; repelled Mongols; Malik Kafur’s Deccan raids; first revenue settlement in India
Tughlaq1320–1414Muhammad bin Tughlaq — shifting capital (Delhi→Daulatabad); token currency failure; taxation. Firuz Shah — many canals; Jizya on Brahmins
Sayyid1414–1451Weak rulers; Timur’s invasion aftermath
Lodi1451–1526Ibrahim Lodi — First Battle of Panipat (1526) — defeated by Babur; last Afghan ruler of Delhi

Bihar Under Delhi Sultanate

  • Bihar as a province: Bakhtiyar Khilji’s conquest made Bihar part of Bengal province initially, then a separate subah.
  • Tughlaq period: Bihar had relative stability; many mosques and Islamic institutions established.
  • Mallik Ibrahim Bayu: Notable governor of Bihar under Tughlaqs.

B3.  Bhakti Movement — Bihar Dimension

SaintPeriodPlaceKey Teaching & Bihar Link
Ramananda14th–15th cVaranasiVaishnava reformer; taught equality; disciple list includes Kabir, Ravidas, Dhanna — all influenced Bihar
Kabir Das1440–1518Varanasi/MagaharNo caste/religion distinction; influenced Bihar weavers (Julaha community); Dohas still recited
Guru Nanak1469–1539PunjabFounder of Sikhism; visited Patna (Gurdwara Patnasahib = Takht Sri Harmandir Sahib); Bihar connection
Chaitanya Mahaprabhu1486–1533Bengal/NavadwipVaishnava Bhakti; kirtan; influenced Bengal-Bihar border region
Surdas1478–1583AgraBlind poet; ‘Sur Sagar’; devotion to Krishna
Mirabai1498–1546RajasthanKrishna devotee; female Bhakti saint
Tukaram1608–1650MaharashtraVarkari movement; abhangas; social equality
BPSC FACT FLASH
Sikh connection to Bihar: Guru Gobind Singh born in Patna (1666 CE). Takht Sri Patna Sahib — one of 5 Takhts of Sikhism. BPSC repeatedly asks this.
Kabir Das: Buried at Magahar (UP) — Hindu-Muslim dispute; legend says flowers appeared instead of body.
Bhakti Movement = spiritual answer to caste discrimination + challenge to Brahminical dominance + vernacular language promotion.

B4.  Sufi Movement

Order (Silsila)Key SaintBihar / North India Connection
ChishtiMoinuddin Chishti (Ajmer); Nizamuddin Auliya (Delhi); Qutbuddin Bakhtiyar KakiMost popular in India; music (Sama) allowed; open to all
SuhrawardiBahauddin Zakariya (Multan)More orthodox; wealth allowed; Punjab & Sind focus
QadiriAbd-ul-Qadir Gilani (Baghdad)Common in Bihar; Dara Shikoh was a follower
NaqshbandiKhwaja Baqibillah; Shaikh Ahmad SirhindiOpposed to Akbar’s Din-i-Ilahi; influence on Aurangzeb

B5.  Mughal Empire (1526–1857)

EmperorPeriodKey Facts & Bihar Connection
Babur1526–1530Founded Mughal Empire; First Battle of Panipat (1526) vs Ibrahim Lodi; Second battle (1527) vs Rana Sanga (Khanwa); wrote Baburnama
Humayun1530–1556Lost empire to Sher Shah Suri (Battle of Chausa 1539, near Buxar, Bihar; Battle of Kanauj 1540); Regained with Persian help; died falling from library
Sher Shah Suri1540–1545BIHAR’S GREATEST RULER — born at Sasaram (Bihar); built Grand Trunk Road (GT Road); efficient administration; introduced Rupee; revenue reforms; Sher Shah’s tomb at Sasaram (Bihar) — finest example of Sur architecture
Akbar1556–1605Greatest Mughal; Din-i-Ilahi; Fatehpur Sikri; Navratnas; abolished Jizya; Battle of Panipat II (1556) vs Hemu; Bihar & Bengal under Akbar
Jahangir1605–1627Nur Jahan’s influence; Thomas Roe (British embassy); artistic period; rebellions in Bihar (son Khusrau)
Shah Jahan1628–1658Taj Mahal; Peacock Throne; Red Fort; Mughal architecture peak; Bihar subah under capable governors
Aurangzeb1658–1707Re-imposed Jizya; destroyed temples; Deccan wars exhausted empire; revolt of Jats, Sikhs, Marathas; longest reigning Mughal; Guru Gobind Singh vs Aurangzeb
Sher Shah Suri — BPSC Bihar Special (Most Asked)
Full Name: Farid Khan; title ‘Sher Shah’ after killing a tiger.
Born: Sasaram, Bihar (disputed — also Bajwada, Punjab; but Sasaram tomb is definitive Bihar link).
Tomb at Sasaram: Built in his lifetime; octagonal structure; situated in the middle of a lake; finest example of Indo-Afghan architecture.
Grand Trunk Road: Sonargaon (Bangladesh) to Peshawar (Pakistan) — 2,400 km; also called Sadak-e-Azam / Badshahi Sadak / NH-1.
Rupee: Sher Shah introduced silver Rupee (weighing 178 grains) — forerunner of modern Indian Rupee.
Revenue Reforms: Measured land with ‘Gaz-i-Sikandari’; collected 1/3 of produce as tax; detailed revenue records — basis for Todar Mal’s reforms later.

B6.  Vijayanagara & Bahmani Kingdoms

KingdomPeriodKey Facts
Bahmani Kingdom1347–1518 CEFounded by Alauddin Bahman Shah; capital Gulbarga then Bidar; later split into 5 Deccan Sultanates (Bijapur, Golconda, Ahmadnagar, Berar, Bidar)
Vijayanagara Empire1336–1646 CEFounded by Harihara I and Bukka Raya (Sangama dynasty); Krishnadeva Raya (1509–29) = greatest ruler; Hampi = capital; Telugu literature; Abdur Razzak (Persian traveler) praised it

B7.  Medieval Art, Architecture & Culture — Bihar Focus

PeriodStyleKey Examples in/near Bihar
Pre-GuptaBuddhist rock-cut; stupaNagarjuni Caves (Gaya, Bihar) — Ashoka’s time; Barabar Caves (Gaya) — oldest rock-cut caves in India
GuptaNagara temple style; sculptureMundeshwari Temple (Kaimur, Bihar) — one of oldest functional temples in India (~4th CE)
PalaBronze sculpture; Buddhist manuscript paintingNalanda Museum, Bihar; finest bronzes of Avalokiteshvara, Tara
Sultanate in BiharIndo-Islamic mosques, tombsDargah of Makhdum Shah in Maner (Patna), Bihar Sharif tombs
Mughal in BiharGarden tombs, Sarai architectureSher Shah’s Tomb (Sasaram); Rohtasgarh Fort (Rohtas district, Bihar) — Sher Shah’s massive hilltop fort
BPSC FACT FLASH
Barabar Caves (Gaya, Bihar): Oldest rock-cut caves in India — Ashoka (3rd c BCE). Dedicated to Ajivikas. Inspiration for E.M. Forster’s ‘Marabar Caves’ in Passage to India.
Mundeshwari Temple (Kaimur): One of the oldest functional Hindu temples in the world (~4th century CE). Dedicated to Shiva-Shakti.
Rohtasgarh Fort: Built by Sher Shah Suri; Rohtas district, Bihar. Considered impregnable. Key military fort.
Maner Sharif (Patna): Most important medieval Muslim shrine in Bihar; tomb of Makhdoom Yahya Maneri (14th CE Sufi saint).

PART C:  MODERN HISTORY — INDIA & BIHAR (19th–20th Century)

C1.  European Advent in India

Event / BattleYearDetails
Portuguese arrive1498Vasco da Gama lands at Calicut; first European sea route to India
Portuguese in India1510Albuquerque captures Goa; Estado da India
English East India Co.1600Royal Charter by Elizabeth I; first factory at Surat (1608)
Dutch East India Co.1602VOC; controlled spice trade initially
French East India Co.1664Established by Colbert; Pondicherry 1674
Battle of Plassey1757Clive defeats Siraj-ud-Daulah (Nawab of Bengal); marks real beginning of British empire in India
Battle of Buxar1764BIHAR’S MOST IMPORTANT BATTLE — British vs combined forces of Mir Qasim + Nawab of Awadh (Shuja-ud-Daula) + Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II; British victory secured Bengal, Bihar, Orissa
Battle of Buxar (1764) — BPSC’s Favourite Modern History Question
Location: Buxar, Bihar — on the banks of River Ganga.
British Commander: Hector Munro.
Alliance against British: Mir Qasim (ex-Bengal Nawab) + Shuja-ud-Daula (Nawab of Awadh) + Shah Alam II (Mughal Emperor).
Result: British victory → Treaty of Allahabad (1765) — Shah Alam II granted Diwani rights (revenue collection) of Bengal, Bihar, and Orissa to East India Company.
Significance: More decisive than Plassey — Britain became real administrative power in India. Foundation of Company’s raj in Bihar.

C2.  Revolt of 1857 — Bihar’s Role

Causes of 1857 Revolt

  • Political: Doctrine of Lapse (Dalhousie); annexation of Awadh (1856); interference in succession.
  • Economic: Drain of wealth; ruin of Indian handicrafts; heavy taxation; Zamindari system.
  • Military: General Service Enlistment Act; low pay; racial discrimination against Indian soldiers.
  • Social/Religious: Missionary activities; Age of Consent Act fears; Enfield rifle cartridge controversy (greased with cow/pig fat).

Bihar in 1857 — Key Events & Leaders

Leader / PlaceRole in 1857 Revolt
Kunwar Singh (Jagdishpur, Bihar)Most celebrated hero of 1857 from Bihar; 80-year-old zamindar; fought British at Arrah, Azamgarh, Jagdishpur; cut off own arm shot by British bullet and offered it to Ganga; called ‘Lion of Bihar’
Amar SinghSon of Kunwar Singh; continued resistance after father’s death on April 26, 1858; captured Jagdishpur
Hasan KhanLed uprising at Patna; tried to organise rebellion in Bihar
Peer Ali KhanPatna-based revolutionary; bookseller; executed by British in 1857; organized Wahabi movement activities
Arrah (Bhojpur)Hub of 1857 revolt in Bihar; Kunwar Singh’s main base of operations
BPSC FACT FLASH
Kunwar Singh: Born Jagdishpur (Bhojpur district), Bihar, 1777. Died April 26, 1858 — just days after his final victory. His birthday ‘Veer Kunwar Singh Vijayotsav’ is state festival in Bihar.
Arrah (Bhojpur) — British tried to besiege; William Tayler was Commissioner. Famous ‘Little House’ siege.
Jagdishpur: Kunwar Singh’s stronghold; Bhojpur district, Bihar. Site of final battle.

C3.  Peasant & Tribal Revolts in Bihar

RevoltYearLeadersCause & Outcome
Sanyasi Revolt1763–1800Majnum Shah, Musa Shah, Bhavani Pathak, Devi ChaudhuraniAgainst EIC restrictions on pilgrimage & trade; Bengal-Bihar border; inspiration for Bankim’s ‘Anandamath’
Chhota Nagpur Uprising / Bhumij Revolt1832Ganga Narayan SinghAgainst landlord (thikadars) and Company exploitation; Chhota Nagpur (now Jharkhand — was Bihar)
Santhal Hul / Santhal Uprising1855–1856Sidhu & Kanhu MurmuAgainst mahajans (moneylenders) and Damin-i-Koh alienation; Bihar-Jharkhand border; ‘Hul’ = revolution in Santali; suppressed brutally; >10,000 Santhals killed
Indigo (Neel) Revolt1859–1860Digambar Biswas, Bishnu BiswasAgainst forced indigo cultivation; Bengal-Bihar; Nil Darpan play by Dinabandhu Mitra depicted conditions
Birsa Munda Movement1895–1900Birsa MundaSee below
Birsa Munda — BPSC Bihar Special
Born: November 15, 1875 at Ulihatu, Khunti (now Jharkhand — then Bihar).
Movement: Ulgulan (Great Tumult) — against British land alienation, missionaries, and dikus (outsiders).
Economic demand: Restore tribal land rights; abolish bethbegari (forced labour); reverse land alienation under Wilkinson’s Rules.
Religious dimension: Claimed divine power; declared himself ‘Dharti Abba’ (Father of Earth); founded Birsait sect — blend of tribal, Hindu, Christian elements.
Death: Died in Ranchi Jail (June 9, 1900) — age 25; officially cholera, suspected British foul play.
Legacy: Jharkhand Statehood (November 15, 2000) was timed on his birthday. Birsa Munda Airport, Ranchi named after him.

C4.  Indian National Movement — Bihar’s Role

Moderate Phase (1885–1905)

  • INC founded 1885: A.O. Hume, Dadabhai Naoroji (Grand Old Man; Drain Theory), Surendranath Banerjee. Bihar’s representation from early sessions.
  • Bihar at early sessions: Bihar leaders participated in Calcutta and Bombay sessions. Bengal partition (1905) galvanised Bihar too.

Extremist Phase & Partition of Bengal (1905–1920)

  • Partition of Bengal (1905): Lord Curzon; created new province of East Bengal and Assam; Swadeshi and Boycott movements erupted.
  • Bihar’s Swadeshi response: Boycott of British goods; national schools; Mazharul Haque and Sachindra Prasad Singh were early Bihar leaders.
  • Partition of Bihar (1912): Bihar and Orissa separated from Bengal as separate province — Capital: Patna. Patna became provincial capital on March 22, 1912.

Champaran Satyagraha (1917) — Gandhi’s First Experiment in India

Champaran Satyagraha 1917 — Most Important Bihar-Modern History Topic
Location: Champaran district, Bihar — now split into East & West Champaran.
Issue: Tinkathia system — indigo farmers forced to cultivate indigo on 3/20th of their land for planters; no freedom to switch to food crops.
Gandhi’s arrival: Invited by Raj Kumar Shukla (illiterate farmer). Gandhi arrived April 10, 1917; faced arrest orders but refused to leave — first act of civil disobedience in India.
Key associates: Rajendra Prasad, J.B. Kripalani, Mazhar-ul-Haque, Brajkishore Prasad, Anugrah Narayan Sinha — all Bihar leaders who worked with Gandhi.
Champaran Agrarian Act 1918: Tinkathia system abolished; relief to farmers. Gandhi’s first decisive victory in India.
Significance: Transformed Gandhi from a South African activist to India’s national leader. Showed Satyagraha could work in India.

Non-Cooperation Movement (1920–22) — Bihar

  • Bihar’s response: Massive participation; Bihar Vidyapith established (alternative to British schools); lawyers like Rajendra Prasad gave up practice.
  • Chauri Chaura (Feb 1922): UP, not Bihar — but Gandhi’s suspension of NCM affected Bihar’s movement too.
  • Mazharul Haque: Great Bihar leader; founded ‘Searchlight’ newspaper; Sadakat Ashram (Patna) — still significant.

Civil Disobedience Movement (1930–34) — Bihar

  • Salt Satyagraha (1930): Bihar’s Patna, Gaya, Champaran held salt marches; Sheel Bhadra Yajee and other leaders led marches.
  • Bihar earthquake (1934): Great Bihar Earthquake (8.1 magnitude) during CDM; Gandhi called it divine punishment for untouchability — Tagore disagreed on superstition grounds.
  • Poona Pact (1932): Gandhi’s fast against separate electorate for Dalits. Ambedkar-Gandhi agreement. Bihar had significant Dalit population affected.

Quit India Movement (1942) — Bihar

Quit India Movement 1942 — Bihar’s Central Role
August 8–9, 1942: Gandhi’s ‘Do or Die’ call at Gowalia Tank, Bombay. AICC resolution passed.
Bihar was the EPICENTRE of QIM: Most violent and sustained resistance came from Bihar.
Parallel Government in Bihar: Satyen Bose led parallel government in Ballia (UP border). Jayshankar Pandey in Bhagalpur, Bihar.
JP’s escape: Jayaprakash Narayan (JP) escaped from Hazaribagh Jail (then Bihar) in November 1942; organized underground resistance. His escape is legendary.
Tamluk (Bengal) — parallel government; Satara (Maharashtra) — Prati Sarkar; Bihar contributions — numerous underground cells.
Women leaders: Rambriksha Benipuri, Sundar Lal led Bihar movements. Mridula Sarabhai organized; women’s participation high.

C5.  Key Bihar Leaders in Freedom Struggle

LeaderLifeContribution
Rajendra Prasad1884–1963First President of India; born Ziradei (Siwan, Bihar); Champaran; Non-Cooperation; gave up legal practice; Bihar Vidyapith Chancellor
Jayaprakash Narayan (JP)1902–1979Born Sitab Diara (Saran, Bihar); escaped Hazaribagh Jail 1942; ‘Loknayak’; led Bihar Movement (1974); Total Revolution concept; died after emergency
Anugrah Narayan Sinha1887–1957Bihar Vibhuti; first Deputy CM & Finance Minister of Bihar; Champaran; organized Bihar movement
Babu Jagjivan Ram1908–1986Born Chandwa (Bhojpur, Bihar); Dalit leader; Union Minister 45 years; Champaran participant; Deputy PM under Morarji Desai government
Maulana Mazharul Haque1866–1930Bihar Congress leader; founded ‘The Searchlight’; established Sadakat Ashram (Patna); helped Gandhi in Champaran
Kunwar Singh1777–1858Jagdishpur hero; 1857 revolt; see Section C2
Dr. Shri Krishna Sinha1887–1961Bihar Kesari; first Chief Minister of Bihar; freedom fighter; Champaran; organized Bihar movement against British

C6.  Social Reform Movements — Bihar

Movement / OrganizationLeader / PeriodFocus
Brahmo Samaj (1828)Ram Mohan Roy (Bengal)Against sati, child marriage; widow remarriage; monotheism; rationalism; influence spread to Bihar
Arya Samaj (1875)Dayananda Saraswati (Gujarat)Vedas as supreme; against idol worship, caste; Shuddhi movement; strong presence in Bihar
Ramakrishna Mission (1897)Vivekananda (Bengal)Service as worship; vedanta; influenced educated Bihar youth
Social reform in BiharMaulana Mazharul Haque, Rajendra Prasad, Shri Krishna SinhaEducation of women; anti-untouchability; Champaran work

C7.  Partition & Independence — Bihar Context

  • Bihar population in 1947: Majority Hindu; significant Muslim minority; no major partition violence unlike Punjab/Bengal.
  • Formation of Bihar: Bihar & Orissa province since 1912; after independence Bihar became separate state (Orissa separated 1936). Jharkhand carved out from Bihar in November 2000.
  • Rajendra Prasad: Chaired Constituent Assembly; signed Constitution on January 24, 1950; became first President of India on January 26, 1950.
  • Bihar’s capital: Patna — one of world’s oldest continually inhabited cities; ancient Pataliputra.

PART D:  BIHAR — SPECIAL HISTORY, CULTURE & HERITAGE

D1.  Bihar’s Ancient Centres of Learning

InstitutionLocation in BiharPeriodFounded By / Key Facts
Nalanda UniversityNalanda district (Rajgir area)5th–12th CEKumaragupta I; 10,000 students; 2,000 teachers; 9 million manuscripts; Hiuen Tsang studied here; destroyed 1193 CE by Bakhtiyar Khilji; UNESCO Heritage 2016
Vikramshila UniversityAntichak, Bhagalpur district8th–13th CEFounded by Dharmapala (Pala king); rival to Nalanda; tantric Buddhism; destroyed 1203 CE
Odantapuri UniversityBihar Sharif, Nalanda district8th–12th CEFounded by Gopala (Pala king); oldest of Pala universities; destroyed by Bakhtiyar Khilji
Valabhi (Gujarat)Not in Bihar5th–8th CEFor reference; rival to Nalanda
Modern IIT PatnaBihta, Patna2008IIT established in Bihar under new IIT expansion

D2.  Bihar’s Religious Heritage — Key Sites

SiteDistrictSignificance
Bodh GayaGayaEnlightenment of Gautam Buddha; Mahabodhi Temple (UNESCO WHS 2002); most sacred Buddhist site
VaishaliVaishaliBirth of Lord Mahavira; last sermon of Buddha; World’s first republic (Lichchhavi); Ashoka Pillar here
Rajgir (Rajgriha)Nalanda1st Buddhist Council; Ajatashatru’s capital; Venuvan (first Buddhist monastery); hot springs; Vishwa Shanti Stupa
PawapuriNalandaDeath/Mahaparinirvana of Lord Mahavira; Jal Mandir (marble temple in lake)
Patna Sahib / Harmandir SahibPatnaBirth of Guru Gobind Singh (1666 CE); Takht Sri Patna Sahib — one of 5 Sikh Takhts
NalandaNalandaAncient university ruins; UNESCO Heritage 2016; Bihar’s most important archaeological site
Kesaria StupaEast ChamparanLargest Buddhist stupa in the world; where Buddha gave his last bowl to his followers
VikramshilaBhagalpurAncient Pala-era university ruins
Vishnupad TempleGayaSacred Hindu temple; Lord Vishnu’s footprint (Dharasila); annual Pitru Paksha Mela
Mundeshwari TempleKaimurOne of oldest functional Hindu temples (4th CE); dedicated to Shiva-Shakti

D3.  Bihar’s Cultural Heritage — Folk Arts & Traditions

Art Form / FestivalType / CategoryKey Features
Madhubani / Mithila PaintingFolk paintingOriginated in Mithila (Darbhanga, Madhubani, Sitamarhi); bold lines; natural dyes; GI Tag 2007; themes — Hindu mythology, nature; Sita, Ram depicted
Chhath PujaFestivalBihar’s biggest festival; dedicated to Sun God (Surya) and Chhathi Maiya; performed on banks of rivers; strict 36-hour fast; unique in India — no idol worship; UNESCO Representative List consideration
Sonepur MelaFairWorld’s largest cattle fair; held at Harihar Kshetra (confluence of Ganga & Gandak), Sonepur, Saran; Kartik Purnima; dates to Mauryan period
Jat-Jatin DanceFolk danceNorth Bihar (Mithila); performed during monsoon by young couples; celebrated love
Sama-ChakevaFestivalBird-shaped figures made; celebrated in Kartik month; Mithila region; folk song tradition
BidesiaFolk theatre / dramaCreated by Bhikhari Thakur (1887–1971) from Saran district; migrant labour’s tragedy; called ‘Shakespeare of Bhojpuri’
Jhijhia DanceFolk danceNorth Bihar; performed by women during Navratri; vessel with holes and lamp carried on head
SarhulTribal festivalCelebrated by Oraon, Munda, Ho tribes (Jharkhand-Bihar); worship of Sal tree; spring festival
BPSC FACT FLASH
Madhubani Painting GI Tag (2007): India’s first painting to receive GI tag. Now exported globally. Sitamarhi, Madhubani, Darbhanga districts.
Chhath Puja: Only festival where sun is worshipped during sunset (Sandhya Arghya) AND sunrise (Usha Arghya). Bihar’s identity festival.
Sonepur Mela: Also called ‘Harihar Kshetra Mela’; elephant trading historically famous; runs for a month; mentioned by Chandragupta Maurya’s time.
Bhikhari Thakur (1887–1971): ‘Bhojpuri’s Shakespeare’; born Kutubpur, Saran, Bihar; Bidesia play; social reformer through drama; Padma Bhushan posthumously.

D4.  Bihar’s Languages & Literature

LanguageRegion in BiharKey Features / Literature
MaithiliNorth Bihar (Mithila — Darbhanga, Madhubani, Muzaffarpur)8th Schedule language; ‘Vidyapati’ (1352–1448) = greatest Maithili poet; called ‘Maithil Kokil’ (Nightingale of Maithili)
BhojpuriWest Bihar + Eastern UPWidely spoken; Bhikhari Thakur’s Bidesia; international reach through diaspora
MagahiCentral Bihar (Gaya, Patna, Nawada, Jehanabad)Language of Magadha; ancient language
AngikaEast Bihar (Bhagalpur, Banka, Munger)Language of Anga region
HindiOfficial language of BiharAdministrative language; medium of education
Urdu2nd Official Language of BiharCo-official status; significant Muslim population
BPSC FACT FLASH
Vidyapati (1352–1448 CE): Greatest medieval poet of Bihar; wrote in Maithili and Sanskrit; ‘Padas’ (devotional songs to Krishna-Radha); patronised by King Shiva Simha of Tirhut; his songs sung as folk songs in Bihar-Nepal even today.
Maithili in 8th Schedule: Added in 2003 (92nd Constitutional Amendment). Maithili writing uses Mithilakshar / Tirhuta script.

D5.  Bihar — Important Administrative History

EventYearDetails
Separation from Bengal1912Bihar & Orissa Province created; Capital Patna; March 22, 1912
Orissa separation1936Orissa became separate province under Govt. of India Act 1935 provisions
Independence1947Bihar became state of independent India; Shri Krishna Sinha = first Chief Minister
Zamindari Abolition1950Bihar Land Reforms Act; abolished zamindari system
First state elections1952Congress won; SK Sinha became first elected CM
Bihar Reorganisation Act2000Jharkhand carved out (November 15, 2000 — Birsa Munda’s birthday)
Current BiharPresent18 divisions; 38 districts; Capital: Patna; Official languages: Hindi & Urdu

PART E:  CULTURE OF INDIA — BPSC FOCUS AREAS

E1.  Indian Architecture — Timeline

PeriodStyleExamples
HarappanTown planning; burnt brick; no templeMohenjo-daro, Harappa, Dholavira
MauryanRock-cut caves; stone pillars; stupasBarabar Caves (Bihar); Ashoka Pillar at Vaishali, Sarnath, Lauriya Nandangarh (Bihar)
Shunga-SatavahanaBuddhist gateways (toranas); stupa expansionSanchi stupa (MP) gateways; Amaravati stupa
GuptaNagara (north) temple style; shikharaDashavatara Temple (Deogarh, UP); temples in Madhya Pradesh; Bihar’s Mundeshwari
PallavaRathas (monolithic); MahabalipuramShore Temple; Arjuna’s Penance
CholaDravidian style; massive towers (Gopura)Brihadeeshwara Temple (Thanjavur); Gangaikondacholapuram
Delhi SultanateIndo-Islamic; arches; domes; minaretsQutub Minar (Delhi); Adhai Din Ka Jhonpra (Ajmer)
MughalBlend of Persian-Indian; marble inlay; charbaghTaj Mahal; Red Fort; Humayun’s Tomb; Fatehpur Sikri; Sher Shah’s Tomb (Sasaram, Bihar)
ColonialIndo-Saracenic; GothicGateway of India (Mumbai); Victoria Memorial (Kolkata)

E2.  Indian Painting Schools

SchoolPeriod / PlaceFeatures
Ajanta2nd BCE – 6th CE; MaharashtraBuddhist themes; narrative paintings; greatest ancient frescoes; UNESCO WHS
Mughal Painting16th–18th CEPersian + Indian; Akbar’s court: Daswant, Basawan; Hamzanama; realistic portraiture
Rajput / Rajasthani17th–19th CEMewar, Bundi, Kota schools; rich colours; nature; Ramayana/Krishna themes
Pahari17th–19th CE; Hills of HP/J&KBasohli, Kangra schools; Gita Govinda illustrations; lyrical style
Madhubani / MithilaAncient; Mithila, BiharGI Tag 2007; natural colours; religious & social themes; bold outlines
PattachitraOdishaPalm leaf / cloth scroll painting; Jagannath themes
Bengal SchoolLate 19th–20th CEAbanindranath Tagore, Nandalal Bose; national art movement; opposed colonial influence

E3.  Indian Classical Music & Dance

FormTypeKey Features / Bihar Connection
Hindustani MusicNorth Indian classicalGharanas: Gwalior, Agra, Kirana; Ragas; Dhrupad (ancient; Bihar/Vrindavan); Khyal, Thumri, Tappa
Carnatic MusicSouth Indian classicalMore structured; Tyagaraja, Muthuswami Dikshitar, Shyama Shastri (Trinity)
DhrupadAncient Hindustani formOriginated from Gwalior; associated with Bhakti; performed in Bihar temples; Darbhanga Gharana of Dhrupad = most famous
ThumriSemi-classicalAssociated with Varanasi, Lucknow; expressive; love/devotion themes; Bihar singers contributed
BharatanatyamClassical dance; Tamil NaduOldest classical dance; Devadasi tradition; revived by Rukmini Devi Arundale
KathakClassical dance; North IndiaAssociated with Bihar-UP-Rajasthan; court dance under Mughals; Jaipur and Lucknow gharanas
ManipuriClassical dance; ManipurGentle movements; Vaishnava themes; Radha-Krishna
OdissiClassical dance; OdishaBased on Mahari tradition; lyrical; Jayadeva’s Gita Govinda
ChhauSemi-classical; Bihar/Jharkhand/OdishaMask dance; Purulia, Seraikela, Mayurbhanj styles; martial elements
BPSC FACT FLASH
Darbhanga Gharana (Dhrupad): Most prestigious Dhrupad singing tradition; based in Darbhanga (Mithila, Bihar); Mallick family. UNESCO consideration for Dhrupad.
Chhau dance: UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage (2010). Practised in Bihar’s Seraikela-Kharsawan (now Jharkhand), West Bengal’s Purulia, and Odisha’s Mayurbhanj.

E4.  Indian Philosophy Schools — Quick Reference

School (Darshana)TypeKey Teaching
NyayaAstika (accepts Vedas)Logic and epistemology; Gautama
VaisheshikaAstikaAtomic theory; Kanada
SankhyaAstikaDualism of Purusha-Prakriti; Kapila
YogaAstikaEight-fold path; Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras
MimamsaAstikaVedic ritual importance; Jaimini
VedantaAstikaBrahman = ultimate reality; Adi Shankaracharya (Advaita), Ramanuja (Vishishtadvaita), Madhva (Dvaita)
Charvaka / LokayataNastika (atheistic)Materialism; pleasure is ultimate goal; rejected Vedas
BuddhismNastikaDependent origination; no permanent self
JainismNastikaAnekantavada (many-sidedness); Syadvada; non-violence

PART F:  QUICK REVISION CHARTS & PREVIOUS YEAR QUESTIONS

F1.  Bihar’s ‘Firsts’ — BPSC Favourite Questions

First / NotableDetails
World’s First RepublicVaishali (Lichchhavi Gana-Sangha) — ~6th century BCE
World’s First Residential UniversityNalanda University (5th century CE, Bihar)
Oldest Rock-Cut Caves in IndiaBarabar Caves, Gaya, Bihar (Ashoka, 3rd c BCE)
First President of IndiaDr. Rajendra Prasad — born Ziradei, Siwan, Bihar
First Buddhist CouncilRajgriha (Rajgir), Bihar — 484 BCE
First Indian Election Commission of Independent IndiaSukumar Sen (not Bihar-specific, but Bihar elections matter)
First Chief Minister of BiharDr. Shri Krishna Sinha
Guru Gobind Singh’s BirthplacePatna, Bihar — 1666 CE
Mahavira’s Birth & DeathBorn Vaishali (Bihar); Died Pawapuri (Bihar)
Champaran Satyagraha — Gandhi’s First in IndiaEast/West Champaran, Bihar — 1917
Oldest functional Hindu Temple in IndiaMundeshwari Temple, Kaimur, Bihar (~4th CE)
Largest Buddhist Stupa in WorldKesaria Stupa, East Champaran, Bihar

F2.  Important Years — Bihar History (BPSC MCQ Bank)

YearEvent
563 BCEBirth of Gautama Buddha (Lumbini, Nepal)
599 BCEBirth of Lord Mahavira (Kundagrama, Vaishali, Bihar)
527 BCEMahavira’s Nirvana at Pawapuri, Bihar
483 BCEMahaparinirvana of Buddha at Kushinagar; 1st Buddhist Council at Rajgir (484 BCE)
321 BCEChandragupta Maurya founded Mauryan Empire (Pataliputra capital)
273 BCEAshoka ascended Maurya throne
261 BCEKalinga War; Ashoka’s conversion to Buddhism
1193 CEBakhtiyar Khilji destroyed Nalanda; conquered Bihar
1539 CEBattle of Chausa (Bihar) — Sher Shah defeats Humayun
1764 CEBattle of Buxar (Bihar)
1912 CEBihar & Orissa Province separated from Bengal; Patna becomes capital
1917 CEChamparan Satyagraha — Gandhi’s first Satyagraha in India
1942 CEQuit India Movement; JP’s escape from Hazaribagh jail
1947 CEIndependence; Rajendra Prasad chairs Constituent Assembly
2000 CEJharkhand carved from Bihar (Nov 15 — Birsa Munda’s birthday)

F3.  BPSC Previous Year Questions — History

Ancient History PYQs

BPSC Prelims (Multiple Years)
Which period is also known as the Chalcolithic Age? (a) Old Stone Age (b) New Stone Age (c) Copper Age (d) Iron Age — Answer: (c) Copper Age
BPSC Prelims
Who among the following is associated with the foundation of the Mauryan Empire? (a) Bindusara (b) Chandragupta Maurya (c) Ashoka (d) Kanishka — Answer: (b)
BPSC Prelims
The first Buddhist Council was held at — (a) Vaishali (b) Rajgriha (c) Pataliputra (d) Sarnath — Answer: (b) Rajgriha
BPSC Prelims
Nalanda University was founded by — (a) Chandragupta I (b) Samudragupta (c) Kumaragupta I (d) Skandagupta — Answer: (c) Kumaragupta I

Medieval History PYQs

BPSC Prelims
Sher Shah Suri’s tomb is located at — (a) Delhi (b) Agra (c) Sasaram, Bihar (d) Lahore — Answer: (c) Sasaram, Bihar
BPSC Prelims
Battle of Buxar was fought in — (a) 1757 (b) 1764 (c) 1782 (d) 1800 — Answer: (b) 1764
BPSC Prelims
Who founded the Vikramshila University in Bihar? (a) Gopala (b) Dharmapala (c) Devapala (d) Mahipala — Answer: (b) Dharmapala

Modern History / Bihar PYQs

BPSC Prelims
Champaran Satyagraha was started in — (a) 1915 (b) 1916 (c) 1917 (d) 1918 — Answer: (c) 1917
BPSC Prelims
Who invited Mahatma Gandhi to Champaran? (a) Rajendra Prasad (b) Raj Kumar Shukla (c) J.B. Kripalani (d) Brajkishore Prasad — Answer: (b) Raj Kumar Shukla
BPSC Prelims
Guru Gobind Singh was born at — (a) Amritsar (b) Anandpur Sahib (c) Nanded (d) Patna — Answer: (d) Patna
BPSC Prelims
The Santhal Uprising of 1855–56 was led by — (a) Birsa Munda (b) Sidhu and Kanhu (c) Tilka Majhi (d) Titu Mir — Answer: (b) Sidhu and Kanhu
BPSC Prelims
Jharkhand was carved out of Bihar on — (a) Jan 26, 2000 (b) Aug 15, 2000 (c) Nov 15, 2000 (d) Dec 31, 2000 — Answer: (c) November 15, 2000

F4.  High-Frequency BPSC Topics — Quick Bullets

Always Ask in BPSC — Memorise These

  • Lion Capital: At Sarnath; National Emblem of India; features 4 lions on Ashoka Pillar; ‘Satyameva Jayate’ from Mundaka Upanishad added.
  • Ashoka Pillar at Vaishali: Single bell-shaped capital; depicts rampant lion facing North (toward the place where Buddha was born).
  • Tinkathia System: Champaran’s indigo farming oppression — 3/20 of land for indigo compulsorily; abolished 1918.
  • JP’s Total Revolution: Jayaprakash Narayan’s 1974 concept — Social, Economic, Political, Cultural, Intellectual, Educational, Spiritual revolutions.
  • Rajgir: Rajgriha = ancient capital of Magadha; 1st Buddhist Council; Bimbisara & Ajatashatru’s capital; hot springs; Vishwa Shanti Stupa (Nipponzan Myohoji).
  • Gaya & Bodh Gaya: Different places! Gaya = Hindu pilgrimage (Pitru Paksha/Vishnupad temple). Bodh Gaya = Buddhist (Buddha’s enlightenment, Mahabodhi Temple).
  • Patna Museum: Bihar Museum and Patna Museum have most important Bihar archaeological collections — Mauryan, Gupta, Pala artefacts.
  • Kesaria Stupa: East Champaran; ~30 metre high; world’s largest Buddhist stupa. Built at spot where Buddha distributed his alms bowl.
  • Bimbisara & Ajatashatru: Haryanka dynasty kings of Magadha. Bimbisara was contemporary of Buddha & Mahavira; Ajatashatru imprisoned & killed his father Bimbisara; hosted 1st Buddhist Council at Rajgir.

BPSC Prelims · History & Culture Notes · Ancient | Medieval | Modern | Bihar · 71st BPSC Ready

Key Tags: Maurya · Gupta · Pala · Nalanda · Sher Shah · Battle of Buxar · Champaran · Birsa Munda · Chhath · Madhubani · Rajendra Prasad · JP · Kunwar Singh

Leave a Reply