Class 6 Social Science History Chapter 5 – India, That Is Bharat MCQ With Answers

Class 6 Social Science History Chapter 5 MCQs – India, That Is Bharat

Class 6 Social Science History Chapter 5 MCQs for India, That Is Bharat (based on NCERT textbook Exploring Society: India and Beyond ).


MCQ with Answers for Practice – History Chapter 5 – India, That Is Bharat

Class 6 Social Science – Exploring Society: India and Beyond
Theme B: Tapestry of the Past
History Chapter 5: India, That Is Bharat
This includes All types of MCQs normally asked in school exams, tests, and NCERT exercises.


Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs)History Chapter 5: India, That Is Bharat


Q1. What is the main focus of Chapter 5, “India, That Is Bharat”?
a) Indian freedom struggle
b) Ancient Indian rulers
c) Names and identity of India
d) Indian economy

Answer: c) Names and identity of India

Q2. The quotation at the beginning of the chapter is given by
a) Rabindranath Tagore
b) Jawaharlal Nehru
c) Sri Aurobindo
d) Mahatma Gandhi

Answer: c) Sri Aurobindo

Q3. Which natural features are referred to as India’s boundaries in the chapter?
a) Rivers and plateaus
b) Hills and deserts
c) Himalayas and seas
d) Plains and forests

Answer: c) Himalayas and seas

Q4. The region often referred to as the ‘Indian Subcontinent’ includes
a) Only present-day India
b) Only South India
c) A large part of South Asia
d) Only Northern India

Answer: c) A large part of South Asia

Q5. Which is the most ancient Indian text mentioned in the chapter?
a) Mahābhārata
b) Rāmāyaṇa
c) Ṛig Veda
d) Viṣhṇu Purāṇa

Answer: c) Ṛig Veda

Q6. ‘Sapta Sindhava’ refers to
a) Seven mountains
b) Seven oceans
c) Land of seven rivers
d) Seven kingdoms

Answer: c) Land of seven rivers

Q7. The word ‘Sindhava’ comes from
a) Ganga
b) Yamuna
c) Sindhu
d) Saraswati

Answer: c) Sindhu

Q8. ‘Sindhu’ originally referred to
a) A mountain range
b) A city
c) The Indus River
d) A kingdom

Answer: c) The Indus River

Q9. Which text lists regions such as Kashmir, Kutch, and Kerala?
a) Ṛig Veda
b) Mahābhārata
c) Viṣhṇu Purāṇa
d) Upanishads

Answer: b) Mahābhārata

Q10. Kurukṣhetra mentioned in ancient texts is located in present-day
a) Rajasthan
b) Punjab
c) Haryana
d) Uttar Pradesh

Answer: c) Haryana

Q11. Prāgjyotiṣha refers to which modern region?
a) Bengal
b) Assam
c) Kerala
d) Gujarat

Answer: b) Assam

Q12. Which ancient text uses the terms ‘Bhāratavarṣha’ and ‘Jambudvīpa’?
a) Ṛig Veda
b) Mahābhārata
c) Arthashastra
d) Manusmriti

Answer: b) Mahābhārata

Q13. ‘Bhāratavarṣha’ means
a) Land of rivers
b) Island of trees
c) Country of the Bharatas
d) Sacred land

Answer: c) Country of the Bharatas

Q14. The name ‘Bharata’ first appears in the
a) Mahābhārata
b) Viṣhṇu Purāṇa
c) Ṛig Veda
d) Upanishads

Answer: c) Ṛig Veda

Q15. ‘Jambudvīpa’ literally means
a) Land of mountains
b) Island of the jamun tree
c) Land of rivers
d) Sacred island

Answer: b) Island of the jamun tree

Q16. Which tree is associated with the name ‘Jambudvīpa’?
a) Banyan
b) Peepal
c) Jamun
d) Neem

Answer: c) Jamun

Q17. Which emperor used the term ‘Jambudvīpa’ in his inscriptions?
a) Chandragupta Maurya
b) Harsha
c) Aśhoka
d) Kanishka

Answer: c) Aśhoka

Q18. Aśhoka ruled around
a) 500 BCE
b) 250 BCE
c) 100 CE
d) 500 CE

Answer: b) 250 BCE

Q19. During Aśhoka’s time, India included present-day
a) Only India
b) India and Sri Lanka
c) India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and parts of Afghanistan
d) Only Northern India

Answer: c) India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and parts of Afghanistan

Q20. Which text describes India as land north of the ocean and south of snowy mountains?
a) Mahābhārata
b) Ṛig Veda
c) Viṣhṇu Purāṇa
d) Arthashastra

Answer: c) Viṣhṇu Purāṇa

Q21. ‘Snowy mountains’ mentioned in the Viṣhṇu Purāṇa refer to
a) Aravalli Range
b) Vindhya Range
c) Himalayas
d) Western Ghats

Answer: c) Himalayas

Q22. Cape Kumari is located in
a) Northern India
b) Eastern India
c) Southern tip of India
d) Western India

Answer: c) Southern tip of India

Q23. Ancient Tamil literature shows knowledge of India’s
a) Politics only
b) Geography only
c) Trade routes only
d) Geography and boundaries

Answer: d) Geography and boundaries

Q24. The phrase ‘India, that is Bharat’ appears in the
a) Mahābhārata
b) Ṛig Veda
c) Indian Constitution
d) Viṣhṇu Purāṇa

Answer: c) Indian Constitution

Q25. The Indian Constitution came into force in
a) 1947
b) 1949
c) 1950
d) 1952

Answer: c) 1950

Q26. The first foreigners to mention India were the
a) Greeks
b) Chinese
c) Persians
d) Romans

Answer: c) Persians

Q27. The Persians referred to India as
a) Indoi
b) Bharat
c) Hind / Hidu
d) Yindu

Answer: c) Hind / Hidu

Q28. In ancient Persian, the word ‘Hindu’ was a
a) Religious term
b) Political title
c) Geographical term
d) Cultural term

Answer: c) Geographical term

Q29. The Greeks dropped which letter from ‘Hindu’ to form ‘Indoi’?
a) d
b) n
c) h
d) u

Answer: c) h

Q30. The Greek names for India were
a) Hind and Hidu
b) Indoi and Indike
c) Yindu and Yintu
d) Bharat and Bharatam

Answer: b) Indoi and Indike

Q31. The Chinese name ‘Yindu’ originally comes from
a) Ganga
b) Bharat
c) Sindhu
d) Himalaya

Answer: c) Sindhu

Q32. Which Chinese scholar visited India in the 7th century CE?
a) Fa-Hien
b) Xuanzang
c) Megasthenes
d) Al-Biruni

Answer: b) Xuanzang

Q33. Xuanzang stayed in India for nearly
a) 5 years
b) 10 years
c) 17 years
d) 25 years

Answer: c) 17 years

Q34. Xuanzang translated texts from Sanskrit into
a) Persian
b) Arabic
c) Chinese
d) Greek

Answer: c) Chinese

Q35. ‘Tianzhu’ was a Chinese name for India meaning
a) Land of rivers
b) Sacred land
c) Heavenly master
d) Golden land

Answer: c) Heavenly master

Q36. ‘Hindustān’ was first used in a
a) Greek text
b) Chinese manuscript
c) Persian inscription
d) Indian Purāṇa

Answer: c) Persian inscription

Q37. ‘Hindustān’ began to be used about
a) 500 years ago
b) 1,000 years ago
c) 1,800 years ago
d) 3,000 years ago

Answer: c) 1,800 years ago

Q38. Most foreign names for India were derived from the
a) Ganga River
b) Yamuna River
c) Sindhu / Indus River
d) Godavari River

Answer: c) Sindhu / Indus River

Q39. Which of the following is NOT an ancient name of India?
a) Jambudvīpa
b) Bhārata
c) Hind
d) Asia

Answer: d) Asia

Q40. Today, the official name used in the Constitution is
a) Bharat
b) India
c) India, that is Bharat
d) Hindustan

Answer: c) India, that is Bharat

Q41. The term ‘Indian Subcontinent’ mainly refers to
a) A political unit formed after 1947
b) A cultural region with fixed borders
c) A large geographical region of South Asia
d) Only the plains of North India

Answer: c) A large geographical region of South Asia

Q42. The boundaries of India changed over time mainly because
a) Climate change
b) Natural disasters
c) Political and historical developments
d) Population growth

Answer: c) Political and historical developments

Q43. Which source does NOT help us learn about ancient India’s names?
a) Ancient texts
b) Inscriptions
c) Travellers’ accounts
d) Satellite images

Answer: d) Satellite images

Q44. The term ‘inhabitants’ refers to
a) Visitors to a place
b) Traders and pilgrims
c) People living in a particular place
d) Rulers of a region

Answer: c) People living in a particular place

Q45. Which region was NOT mentioned in the Mahābhārata list of regions?
a) Vanga
b) Kāshmīra
c) Prāgjyotiṣha
d) Tamil Nadu

Answer: d) Tamil Nadu

Q46. The Mahābhārata is difficult to date mainly because
a) It was written in many languages
b) It has no written form
c) It was composed over a long period
d) It contains myths

Answer: c) It was composed over a long period

Q47. The word ‘varṣha’ in ‘Bhāratavarṣha’ means
a) Kingdom
b) Land or region
c) River
d) Mountain

Answer: b) Land or region

Q48. Which statement about ‘Jambudvīpa’ is correct?
a) It referred only to South India
b) It referred only to North India
c) It referred to the entire Indian Subcontinent
d) It referred to a religious centre

Answer: c) It referred to the entire Indian Subcontinent

Q49. The jamun tree mentioned in the chapter is
a) Native to Europe
b) Native to China
c) Native to India
d) Native to Africa

Answer: c) Native to India

Q50. Aśhoka’s inscriptions are important because they
a) Describe wars only
b) Provide names of Indian regions
c) Give clues about ancient names of India
d) Explain foreign invasions

Answer: c) Give clues about ancient names of India

Q51. Which modern countries were part of India during Aśhoka’s rule?
a) Nepal and Bhutan
b) Sri Lanka and Myanmar
c) Pakistan and Bangladesh
d) Iran and China

Answer: c) Pakistan and Bangladesh

Q52. The Viṣhṇu Purāṇa defines Bhārata using
a) Political borders
b) Natural features
c) Language boundaries
d) Religious centres

Answer: b) Natural features

Q53. ‘North of the ocean’ in the Viṣhṇu Purāṇa refers to the
a) Indian Ocean
b) Bay of Bengal
c) Arabian Sea
d) Southern seas around India

Answer: d) Southern seas around India

Q54. The phrase ‘south of the snowy mountains’ indicates
a) Aravalli range
b) Vindhya range
c) Himalayas
d) Eastern Ghats

Answer: c) Himalayas

Q55. Which language uses the form ‘Bharatam’?
a) Hindi
b) Sanskrit
c) Tamil
d) English

Answer: c) Tamil

Q56. The similarity in India’s description across regions shows
a) Political unity
b) Cultural and geographical awareness
c) Religious uniformity
d) Military control

Answer: b) Cultural and geographical awareness

Q57. The Constitution of India was originally written in
a) Hindi only
b) English only
c) Sanskrit
d) Persian

Answer: b) English only

Q58. The Hindi phrase used in the Constitution is
a) Bharat Mata
b) Bharatvarsha
c) Bhārat arthāth India
d) Hindustan

Answer: c) Bhārat arthāth India

Q59. The Persian emperor mentioned in the chapter controlled
a) Ganga basin
b) Yamuna basin
c) Indus River region
d) Deccan Plateau

Answer: c) Indus River region

Q60. Greeks referred to India after learning from
a) Romans
b) Persians
c) Chinese
d) Indians

Answer: b) Persians

Q61. Why did Greeks remove the letter ‘h’ from ‘Hindu’?
a) It was silent
b) It was difficult to pronounce
c) It did not exist in Greek language
d) It changed the meaning

Answer: c) It did not exist in Greek language

Q62. ‘Indike’ is associated with which civilisation?
a) Persian
b) Roman
c) Greek
d) Chinese

Answer: c) Greek

Q63. The Chinese name ‘Yintu’ indicates
a) Trade influence
b) Religious respect
c) Linguistic borrowing
d) Political control

Answer: c) Linguistic borrowing

Q64. Tianzhu reflected China’s respect for India as the land of
a) Vedas
b) Kings
c) Buddha
d) Trade

Answer: c) Buddha

Q65. Xuanzang visited India mainly to
a) Trade spices
b) Meet kings
c) Study Buddhism
d) Conquer territory

Answer: c) Study Buddhism

Q66. Xuanzang’s translations helped in
a) Spreading Hinduism
b) Preserving Indian knowledge
c) Expanding Chinese empire
d) Promoting Persian culture

Answer: b) Preserving Indian knowledge

Q67. The term ‘Hindustān’ was mostly used by
a) Indian villagers
b) European traders
c) Foreign invaders
d) Buddhist monks

Answer: c) Foreign invaders

Q68. Which language uses the term ‘Inde’?
a) English
b) French
c) Spanish
d) German

Answer: b) French

Q69. The Latin word ‘India’ came from
a) Bharat
b) Ganga
c) Indus
d) Himalaya

Answer: c) Indus

Q70. Which idea best explains why India had many names?
a) Frequent wars
b) Large population
c) Long history and foreign contacts
d) Religious diversity

Answer: c) Long history and foreign contacts

Q71. The chapter mainly helps students understand
a) Ancient wars
b) Historical geography and identity
c) Trade routes
d) Religious rituals

Answer: b) Historical geography and identity

Q72. Which term is still officially used today?
a) Jambudvīpa
b) Hindustān
c) Bhārata
d) Indike

Answer: c) Bhārata