Table of Contents
We will share SSC History Syllabus Topic Wise PPT Slides (LEC #1) so, before you open a single chapter of history, you need to know one thing – what exactly is the SSC History syllabus? Most aspirants dive straight into reading without ever mapping out the full landscape. They end up over-studying some topics while completely missing others. This article fixes that problem.
This is Lecture #1 (Serial #26) from the Complete Foundation Batch PPT Series – a structured PPT-based study resource built specifically for SSC exam aspirants. This particular lecture does not teach a history chapter. It does something more important: it shows you the complete, chapter-by-chapter syllabus for History across all three sections – Ancient Indian History, Medieval Indian History, and Modern Indian History.
Think of this as your History preparation roadmap. Once you know every chapter you need to cover, you can plan your time, identify high-priority topics, and approach the subject strategically rather than randomly.
SSC History Syllabus Topic Wise PPT Slides (LEC #1)
Note: If you wish to download the entire SSC series (PPT slides), simply visit this redirect page. – REDIRECT PAGE
1. Complete SSC History Syllabus – Chapter-Wise Table with Exam Weight
The table below lists every chapter from the Complete Foundation Batch PPT Series History syllabus. The ‘Exam Weight’ column is based on analysis of previous SSC CGL, CHSL, CPO, and MTS question papers – study accordingly.
| S.No. | Subject | Chapter Name | Exam Weight |
| 1 | I. Ancient Indian History | Introduction | Low |
| 2 | Indus Valley Civilization | Very High | |
| 3 | Vedic Period | Very High | |
| 4 | Buddhism, Jainism, Shaivism, etc. | Very High | |
| 5 | Mahajanpadas | High | |
| 6 | Mauryan Period | Very High | |
| 7 | Later Mauryan Period | Moderate | |
| 8 | Sangam Period | Moderate | |
| 9 | Foreign Invasion | High | |
| 10 | Gupta Period | High | |
| 11 | Vardan Dynasty | Moderate | |
| 12 | Southern Kingdom | Moderate | |
| 13 | Miscellaneous | Low-Moderate | |
| 14 | II. Medieval Indian History | Foreign Invasion | High |
| 15 | Rajputs & Others | High | |
| 16 | Delhi Sultanate | Very High | |
| 17 | Mughal Empire | Very High | |
| 18 | Rise of New States | High | |
| 19 | Sikhs | High | |
| 20 | Marathas | High | |
| 21 | Vijaynagar & Bahmani | High | |
| 22 | Miscellaneous | Low-Moderate | |
| 23 | III. Modern Indian History | Advent of Europeans | High |
| 24 | Expansion of British Power | Very High | |
| 25 | Rise of New States | High | |
| 26 | News papers in India | Moderate | |
| 27 | Development of Education | Moderate | |
| 28 | GGB, GGI & Viceroys | Very High | |
| 29 | Socio Religious Reforms | High | |
| 30 | Civil & Tribal Uprising | High | |
| 31 | The Revolt of 1857 | Very High | |
| 32 | INC & its Sessions | Very High | |
| 33 | Political and other Associations | High | |
| 34 | Indian National Movement | Very High | |
| 35 | Miscellaneous | Low-Moderate |
2. Why Knowing the Full Syllabus Is Your First Strategic Move
Many aspirants skip this step and jump straight into studying. Here is why that is a mistake – and why this PPT lecture exists as the very first in the series:
- You cannot prioritise what you cannot see. When you see the full syllabus laid out, you immediately notice that Modern History has 13 chapters while Medieval has 9. That tells you where to invest more time.
- SSC History is not random. The same chapters – Revolt of 1857, Delhi Sultanate, Mughal Empire, INC Sessions, Viceroys, Indus Valley Civilization, Buddhism – appear in almost every SSC exam. Knowing the syllabus helps you identify these recurring chapters instantly.
- It prevents the single biggest mistake in SSC prep: over-studying one section. Students who love Ancient History often spend 60% of their time on it, not realising Modern History carries nearly double the question weight.
- It gives you a revision checklist. Before your exam, go through this syllabus table and tick off every chapter you have covered. If something is blank, you know exactly what to revise in your remaining time.
3. Ancient Indian History – All Topics with Key Focus
Ancient Indian History covers the longest time span – from the Indus Valley Civilization (3300 BC) to approximately 700 AD. Despite covering thousands of years, SSC questions from this section cluster around just 5–6 chapters. Here is the complete topic list from the PPT series, with what each topic covers for exam purposes:
| # | Topic | Key Focus / Exam Weight |
| 1 | Major Sites of Indus Valley Civilization & Archaeological Findings | IVC sites, their locations, and excavation details – Very High |
| 2 | Types of Vedas | Four Vedas (Rig, Sama, Yajur, Atharva) – frequently asked |
| 3 | Indus Valley Civilization (IVC) – 3300–1400 BC | Dates, features, town planning, trade – Very High |
| 4 | 16 Mahajanapadas | Names, capitals, and regions – High |
| 5 | Difference between Ramayana and Ramcharitmanas | Authors, language, period – Moderate |
| 6 | Buddhist Councils | Venue, chairman, period – Very High |
| 7 | Buddhism and Jainism | Founders, teachings, councils, spread – Very High |
| 8 | Sangam Literature | Three Sangams, texts, period – Moderate |
| 9 | Rig Veda – Important Facts | Oldest Veda, hymns, deities – High |
| 10 | Vedic Age | Early vs Later Vedic, society, economy – High |
| 11 | Ashoka | Dhamma, Kalinga War, edicts – Very High |
| 12 | Mauryans | Chandragupta, Bindusara, Ashoka – Very High |
| 13 | Post-Mauryan Economy | Satavahanas, trade guilds – Moderate |
| 14 | Sunga Dynasty | Pushyamitra Sunga, art, Bharhut stupa – Moderate |
| 15 | The Gupta Period | Golden Age, Chandragupta I/II, Samudragupta – Very High |
| 16 | Difference between Janapadas and Mahajanapadas | 16 Mahajanapadas emerged from Janapadas – Moderate |
Key Insight: Ancient History Smart Study Tips
- Prioritise Indus Valley Civilization, Buddhism-Jainism, Mauryan Period (Ashoka), and Gupta Period – together these give you 80%+ of Ancient History SSC questions.
- For the Vedic Period: remember the four Vedas, their content, and associated Brahmanas and Upanishads. SSC often asks which Veda is the oldest (Rig Veda) and which contains music (Sama Veda).
- Buddhist Councils: memorise venue, king, and chairman for all 4 councils – this comes up almost every year.
- The Gupta Period is called the Golden Age of India – know Chandragupta I, Samudragupta (Napoleon of India), and Chandragupta II (Vikramaditya), along with Fa Hien’s visit.
4. Medieval Indian History – All Topics with Key Focus
Medieval Indian History (approximately 700 AD to 1750 AD) is the period of Islamic invasions, Delhi Sultanate, Mughal Empire, Bhakti-Sufi movements, and regional kingdoms. SSC questions from this section concentrate heavily on the Delhi Sultanate and Mughal Empire, followed by the Bhakti-Sufi movement.
| # | Topic | Key Focus / Exam Weight |
| 1 | Early Medieval Period in India | Tripartite struggle, Gurjara-Pratiharas – Moderate |
| 2 | Difference Between Bhakti and Sufi Movements | Founders, teachings, key saints – Very High |
| 3 | The Vijayanagar Empire | Krishnadevaraya, Hampi, administration – High |
| 4 | Delhi Sultanate | 5 dynasties: Slave, Khilji, Tughlaq, Sayyid, Lodi – Very High |
| 5 | Religious Movements in India (15th–16th Century) | Bhakti saints, reform movements – High |
| 6 | Mughal Dynasty | Babur to Aurangzeb – rulers, battles, art – Very High |
| 7 | Arab and Turkish Invasions | Muhammad bin Qasim, Mahmud of Ghazni, Muhammad Ghori – Very High |
| 8 | Sayyid and Lodi Dynasties | Founders, rulers, decline – Moderate |
| 9 | North Indian Kingdoms | Chalukyas, Pallavas, Rashtrakutas – Moderate |
| 10 | Battle of Saraighat | Lachit Borphukan vs Mughals (1671) – High |
| 11 | Philosophy in Medieval India | Advaita Vedanta, Dvaita – Moderate |
| 12 | Important Wars and Battles | Panipat 1526/1556, Haldighati – Very High |
| 13 | Mahadji Shinde | Maratha chieftain, battles against British – Moderate |
| 14 | Khilji Dynasty | Alauddin Khilji, market reforms, Mongol invasions – Very High |
| 15 | First Battle of Tarain (1191) | Prithviraj III defeats Muhammad Ghori – High |
| 16 | Second Battle of Tarain (1192) | Muhammad Ghori defeats Prithviraj III – Very High |
| 17 | Sufism in India | Orders (Silsilas), key Sufi saints, khanqahs – High |
Key Insight: Medieval History Smart Study Tips
- Delhi Sultanate: Memorise the 5 dynasties – Slave (Mamluk), Khilji, Tughlaq, Sayyid, Lodi – with their founders and key rulers. Alauddin Khilji’s market reforms, Firuz Shah Tughlaq’s canals, and Ibrahim Lodi (last sultan, defeated at First Battle of Panipat 1526) are most asked.
- Mughal Empire: Know all 6 main rulers – Babur, Humayun, Akbar, Jahangir, Shah Jahan, Aurangzeb – with their key battles, cultural contributions, and religious policies.
- Bhakti-Sufi chapter: Create a table of saint – region – language – key teaching. SSC loves matching-type questions from this chapter.
- Battle of Tarain (1191 and 1192) and Battle of Panipat (1526, 1556, 1761) must be memorised with exact years and parties.
5. Modern Indian History – All Topics with Key Focus
Modern Indian History (roughly 1750 AD to 1947) is the most important section for SSC exams. It covers British arrival, conquest, resistance, reform movements, and the independence struggle. With 34 major topics in the PPT series, this section has the widest scope – and the highest question yield.
| # | Topic | Key Focus / Exam Weight |
| 1 | Freedom Fighters of India | Key leaders, movements, contributions – Very High |
| 2 | Women Freedom Fighters in India | Sarojini Naidu, Kasturba Gandhi, Rani Lakshmibai – High |
| 3 | Social and Religious Reform Movements of 19th Century | Raja Ram Mohan Roy, Brahmo Samaj – Very High |
| 4 | Zamindari System in India | Permanent Settlement, exploitation, impact – High |
| 5 | Revolt of 1857 – Political and Economic Causes | Doctrine of Lapse, drain of wealth – Very High |
| 6 | Revolt of 1857 – Social Causes | Racial discrimination, cultural interference – High |
| 7 | Revolt of 1857 – Military Causes | Greased cartridges, Enfield rifle – Very High |
| 8 | Swadeshi Movement (1905) | Partition of Bengal, boycott of British goods – Very High |
| 9 | Indigo Rebellion | Champaran, Gandhi’s first Satyagraha in India – High |
| 10 | Non-Cooperation Movement (1920–22) | Gandhi, Khilafat, Chauri Chaura – Very High |
| 11 | Salt Satyagraha (1930) | Dandi March, Civil Disobedience – Very High |
| 12 | PanchSheel Agreement | Five Principles, India-China 1954 – Moderate |
| 13 | Dandi March | Gandhi’s 241-mile march, salt tax – Very High |
| 14 | First Round Table Conference 1930 | Congress boycotted, Ambedkar attended – High |
| 15 | Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) | Nehru, Nasser, Tito – Cold War era – High |
| 16 | Hunter Commission | After Jallianwala Bagh 1919 – High |
| 17 | Land Reforms in India | Abolition of Zamindari, ceiling – Moderate |
| 18 | Land Revenue System in India | Permanent Settlement, Ryotwari, Mahalwari – Very High |
| 19 | Impact of British Rule in India | Economic, social, cultural effects – High |
| 20 | India After Independence | Integration of states, Constitution, economy – Moderate |
| 21 | Tribal Uprisings in India | Santhal, Munda (Birsa Munda), Bhil – High |
| 22 | Home Rule Movement | Tilak and Besant (1916) – High |
| 23 | McMahon Line | India-China border, 1914 Simla Convention – Moderate |
| 24 | List of Viceroys of India | Lord Canning to Lord Mountbatten – Very High |
| 25 | Governor General of India and Bengal List | Warren Hastings to Dalhousie – Very High |
| 26 | Indian National Army (INA) and Subhash Chandra Bose | Azad Hind Fauj, INA trials – Very High |
| 27 | All India Kisan Sabha | Peasant movements, 1936 – Moderate |
| 28 | Difference between Moderates and Extremists | INC factions, Surat Split 1907 – Very High |
| 29 | Poona Pact 1932 | Gandhi-Ambedkar, reserved seats – Very High |
| 30 | Hindustan Socialist Republican Association (HSRA) | Bhagat Singh, Chandrashekhar Azad – High |
| 31 | Gandhi-Irwin Pact (1931) | Civil Disobedience suspended – High |
| 32 | Rowlatt Act and Jallianwala Bagh Massacre | 1919, General Dyer – Very High |
| 33 | Battle of Buxar (1764) | British vs Mir Qasim, Shuja-ud-Daula – Very High |
| 34 | Formation of Indian National Congress (1885) | A.O. Hume, first session Bombay – Very High |
Key Insight: Modern History Smart Study Tips
- Governor Generals and Viceroys: This is a single topic that can fetch 2–3 marks in every SSC exam. Make a table with name, tenure, and key event/policy for each. Lord Dalhousie (Doctrine of Lapse, Railways), Lord Curzon (Partition of Bengal 1905), Lord Ripon (Ilbert Bill, Local Self Government), Lord Mountbatten (Independence) – these are most tested.
- INC Sessions: At minimum know the first session (1885, Bombay, W.C. Bonnerjee), Surat Split (1907), Lucknow Pact (1916), Nagpur (1920), and Lahore (1929 – Poorna Swaraj). Venue and president are the two most-tested facts for each session.
- Reform Movements: Create a table of organisation – founder – year – headquarters – key belief. Brahmo Samaj, Arya Samaj, Ramakrishna Mission, Prarthana Samaj, Aligarh Movement are the five most important.
- For the Independence Movement, remember the chronological order of major events: Non-Cooperation (1920), Simon Commission (1927), Dandi March (1930), Round Table Conferences (1930–32), Quit India Movement (1942), INA Trials (1945), Independence (1947).

6. Podcast Discussion – SSC History Syllabus Strategy (Multiple Perspectives)
Three different perspectives – an SSC Mentor, a History Expert, and an SSC Topper – discuss how to approach the History syllabus for SSC exams.
| Speaker / Role | Question | Answer / Perspective |
| Host (SSC Mentor) | Why is knowing the full History syllabus important before starting preparation? | Most students make the mistake of studying topics randomly – they read whatever they find and hope it appears in the exam. But SSC History follows a fixed syllabus: Ancient, Medieval, and Modern Indian History. If you know the complete topic list upfront, you can prioritise. Very High weight topics like the Revolt of 1857, Delhi Sultanate, Mughal Empire, Mauryan Period, and INC Sessions should take up 70% of your study time. The remaining 30% goes to moderate-weight topics. Knowing the syllabus is literally your roadmap. |
| Guest 1 (History Expert) | Out of Ancient, Medieval, and Modern – which section carries the most weight in SSC exams? | Based on past patterns, Modern History contributes the highest number of questions in SSC CGL and CHSL – roughly 40–45% of History questions. It covers the broadest range of topics: Viceroys, reform movements, INC sessions, independence movement, Acts and policies. Medieval History is second – Delhi Sultanate, Mughal Empire, and Bhakti-Sufi movements are asked most. Ancient History is third but has some very high-weight chapters like Indus Valley, Mauryans, Guptas, and Buddhism. Never ignore any section, but prioritise Modern first. |
| Guest 2 (SSC Topper) | For someone starting from scratch, what is the smartest order to study History chapters? | My advice: start with Modern History because it has the highest question yield and many topics are connected to each other. Then move to Medieval – start with Mughal Empire and Delhi Sultanate. Finish with Ancient. Within Ancient, always cover Indus Valley, Vedic Period, Buddhism-Jainism, Mauryans, and Guptas – these five alone give you more than 80% of ancient history questions in SSC exams. The PPT syllabus from the series is perfectly sequenced – follow it chapter by chapter. |
| Host (SSC Mentor) | The PPT series covers ‘GGB, GGI and Viceroys’ as one chapter. Can you explain why this is one of the most important topics? | GGB stands for Governor General of Bengal, GGI stands for Governor General of India, and then we have Viceroys. SSC exams absolutely love questions from this topic – ‘Who was the Viceroy when Jallianwala Bagh happened?’, ‘Under whose tenure was the Partition of Bengal done?’, ‘Who was the first Governor General of free India?’ – these come up every single year. Lord Canning, Lord Dalhousie, Lord Curzon, Lord Ripon, Lord Mountbatten – know all of them with their tenure years and key events. It’s a guaranteed 1–2 marks every exam. |
| Guest 1 (History Expert) | The syllabus includes ‘Civil and Tribal Uprisings’ as a separate chapter. Why is this important for SSC? | Most students ignore tribal uprisings and then regret it in the exam hall. The Santhal Rebellion (1855–56), Munda Rebellion (led by Birsa Munda, 1899–1900), Bhil Revolt, Kol Uprising, Rampa Rebellion – these come up regularly in SSC CGL and CHSL. Birsa Munda is particularly important – his birth anniversary (15 November) is celebrated as Janjatiya Gaurav Divas. The PPT series dedicates a chapter to this specifically because it is a scoring topic that most aspirants skip. |
| Guest 2 (SSC Topper) | Medieval History in the syllabus has two entries for ‘Miscellaneous.’ What kind of topics fall under this? | Miscellaneous in History PPT series means everything that does not fit neatly into a dynasty chapter – like the administrative systems, coins, art and architecture, language and literature of different periods. For example: who built the Qutub Minar? What is the Char Minar? What were the famous coins of Samudragupta? Which language did Babur write his autobiography Baburnama in? These single-line facts that cut across chapters are grouped under Miscellaneous, and they appear frequently in SSC exams as single-answer MCQs. |
| Host (SSC Mentor) | The Modern History section includes ‘Newspapers in India’ and ‘Development of Education.’ Why cover these for SSC? | Two reasons. First, SSC GK section loves questions like ‘Who started the newspaper Kesari?’, ‘Which was the first Hindi newspaper?’, ‘What was the Vernacular Press Act?’ – all from the newspapers chapter. Second, ‘Development of Education’ covers the Macaulay Minute (1835), Wood’s Dispatch (1854), establishment of universities in 1857 – questions that appear regularly. The British shaped India’s education system to serve their administrative needs, and understanding that story also helps you answer cause-effect questions in the exam. |
| Guest 1 (History Expert) | For the Bhakti-Sufi chapter in Medieval History – what is the smartest way to study it? | Make two parallel lists: Bhakti saints and their region/language/teachings on one side, Sufi orders (silsilas) and their key figures on the other. For Bhakti: Kabir (North India, Hindi), Mirabai (Rajasthan, devotion to Krishna), Tukaram (Maharashtra, Marathi), Chaitanya (Bengal, Vaishnavism), Guru Nanak (Punjab, Sikhism). For Sufi: Chishti order (Moinuddin Chishti, Ajmer), Suhrawardi order, Naqshbandi order. SSC often asks ‘Who was the Sufi saint associated with Ajmer?’ or ‘Who founded the Chishti order in India?’ A simple two-column comparison chart covers this entire chapter for exams. |
| Guest 2 (SSC Topper) | What is your single most important tip for someone using this PPT series for SSC History? | Never treat PPT slides as your only source – use them as your revision anchor, not your learning source. Here is my actual method: first read the chapter from a standard book (like Lucent’s GK or Spectrum Modern History). Then watch the class video if available. Then go through the PPT slides and note down whatever you missed or found highlighted. Then make your own one-page summary of each chapter. Finally, attempt at least 30 MCQs from that chapter. The PPT series is most powerful as a quick-revision tool in the last 2 weeks before your exam – it compresses each chapter into its most exam-relevant facts. |
7. SSC Exam Q&A – Syllabus-Based Questions (Previous Year Pattern)
These 15 questions cover topics from across the complete History syllabus – the kind of cross-chapter, conceptual questions that SSC examiners use to test whether aspirants have a broad understanding of the subject.
| # | Question | Answer | Exam Relevance |
| Q1 | How many parts is the SSC History syllabus divided into? | Three parts: (I) Ancient Indian History, (II) Medieval Indian History, and (III) Modern Indian History. The Complete Foundation Batch PPT Series covers all three with chapter-wise PPT slides. | SSC CGL, CHSL, CPO, MTS |
| Q2 | Which section of History has the most questions in SSC CGL? | Modern Indian History – typically contributing 40–45% of all History questions. Topics like Viceroys, INC Sessions, reform movements, and independence movement are asked most frequently. | SSC CGL – strategic |
| Q3 | What does ‘GGB, GGI and Viceroys’ mean in the SSC syllabus? | GGB = Governor General of Bengal (e.g., Warren Hastings, Cornwallis), GGI = Governor General of India (e.g., Dalhousie, Canning), and Viceroys = post-1858 rulers representing the Crown (e.g., Lord Curzon, Lord Mountbatten). This is one of the highest-scoring chapters. | SSC CGL, CHSL, CPO |
| Q4 | Name the five most important chapters in Ancient History for SSC exams. | (1) Indus Valley Civilization, (2) Buddhism and Jainism, (3) Mauryan Period (especially Ashoka), (4) Gupta Period, and (5) Vedic Period. These five alone cover more than 80% of Ancient History questions in SSC. | SSC CGL, CHSL – pattern-based |
| Q5 | What is the Vardan Dynasty (Vardhana Dynasty) covered in Ancient History? | The Pushyabhuti / Vardhana Dynasty, ruled from Thanesar and then Kannauj. Most important ruler: Harshavardhana (606–647 AD). He is famous for his patron of Buddhism, the Nalanda University connection, and the account written by Chinese traveller Xuanzang (Hiuen Tsang). SSC often asks about Harshavardhana’s capital and religion. | SSC CGL, CHSL |
| Q6 | Why is the Sangam Period included in the SSC History syllabus? | The Sangam Period (300 BC – 300 AD) represents the earliest literary tradition of South India (Tamil literature). Three Sangams (literary assemblies) were held at Madurai. Important Sangam texts: Tolkappiyam (grammar), Tirukkural. SSC asks about Sangam kingdoms: Chera, Chola, Pandya. | SSC CGL, CHSL |
| Q7 | What is covered under ‘Socio Religious Reforms’ in Modern History? | This chapter covers 19th-century reform movements: Brahmo Samaj (Raja Ram Mohan Roy, 1828), Arya Samaj (Dayanand Saraswati, 1875), Ramakrishna Mission (Vivekananda, 1897), Prarthana Samaj, Aligarh Movement (Sir Syed Ahmed Khan). SSC frequently asks about founders, year of establishment, and key beliefs. | SSC CGL, CHSL, CPO, MTS |
| Q8 | What is the difference between Moderates and Extremists in the INC? | Moderates (1885–1905): Believed in constitutional methods, petitions, prayers. Leaders: Dadabhai Naoroji, Gopal Krishna Gokhale, Pherozeshah Mehta. Extremists (1905 onwards): Believed in Swaraj, mass agitation, Swadeshi. Leaders: Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Lala Lajpat Rai, Bipin Chandra Pal (Lal-Bal-Pal). Split at Surat Session (1907). | SSC CGL, CHSL – Very High |
| Q9 | What was the Poona Pact of 1932, and why is it important? | Poona Pact (24 September 1932) was an agreement between Mahatma Gandhi and B.R. Ambedkar. The British Communal Award had given separate electorates for Depressed Classes (Dalits). Gandhi went on a fast-unto-death. Under the Pact, separate electorates were dropped, but reserved seats for Depressed Classes within general electorate were increased. SSC asks: year, parties, and what was conceded. | SSC CGL, CHSL – High |
| Q10 | What is the Rowlatt Act, and how does it connect to Jallianwala Bagh? | Rowlatt Act (March 1919): Allowed imprisonment without trial for up to 2 years. Gandhi called for a Hartal (strike) against it. On 13 April 1919 (Baisakhi Day), a peaceful gathering at Jallianwala Bagh, Amritsar was fired upon by troops under Brigadier General Reginald Dyer – killing hundreds. This massacre turned moderate Indian opinion firmly against the British. | SSC CGL, CHSL, CPO, MTS – Very High |
| Q11 | What does the chapter ‘INC and its Sessions’ cover? | All important sessions of the Indian National Congress: 1885 (First Session, Bombay, W.C. Bonnerjee), 1905 (Benaras, Gokhale), 1907 (Surat Split, Tilak vs Moderates), 1916 (Lucknow Pact, Congress-Muslim League), 1920 (Nagpur, Non-Cooperation), 1929 (Lahore, Poorna Swaraj resolution, Jawaharlal Nehru). SSC asks: venue, president, key resolution – for almost every important session. | SSC CGL, CHSL – Very High |
| Q12 | What is the Battle of Buxar and why is it more important than Plassey? | Battle of Buxar (22 October 1764): Fought between East India Company (Hector Munro) and combined forces of Mir Qasim, Nawab of Awadh (Shuja-ud-Daula), and Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II. British won. More significant than Plassey (1757) because it established real British political supremacy in India – not just Bengal. Treaty of Allahabad (1765) followed. SSC asks: date, parties, treaty signed. | SSC CGL, CHSL – High |
| Q13 | Who was Birsa Munda and why is he in the syllabus? | Birsa Munda was a tribal leader of the Munda community (Jharkhand/Chhota Nagpur). He led the Munda Rebellion (Ulgulan – ‘Great Tumult’) of 1899–1900 against British land policies. He was called ‘Dharti Aaba’ (Father of the Earth) by his followers. His birth anniversary, 15 November, is celebrated as Janjatiya Gaurav Divas. SSC asks about the name of his movement and his title. | SSC CGL, CHSL, MTS – High |
| Q14 | What is the Home Rule Movement and who led it? | Launched in 1916 by two separate but coordinated movements: Bal Gangadhar Tilak (Indian Home Rule League, Poona) and Annie Besant (All India Home Rule League, Madras). Demanded self-governance within the British Empire, inspired by Irish Home Rule. Annie Besant was interned by the British in 1917 – which actually boosted the movement. SSC asks: year, leaders, inspiration. | SSC CGL, CHSL – High |
| Q15 | What is the McMahon Line, and why is it still relevant? | The McMahon Line is the boundary between British India (now India) and Tibet (China), drawn by Sir Henry McMahon at the Simla Convention of 1914. China does not recognise it. It forms India’s current northeastern boundary (Arunachal Pradesh). The 1962 India-China War was partly over this disputed boundary. SSC asks: who drew it, when, and which convention. | SSC CGL, CHSL – Moderate-High |
8. How to Use This PPT Series Effectively for SSC History Preparation
Step 1 – Start with the Syllabus (This Lecture)
Print or save this syllabus table. Stick it somewhere visible. Every time you complete a chapter, tick it off. This gives you a visual progress tracker.
Step 2 – Identify Your Weak Areas
Go through the chapter list and honestly mark which topics you are confident about, which need revision, and which you have not studied at all. Focus first on ‘Not Studied’ chapters that have ‘Very High’ exam weight.
Step 3 – Follow the PPT Series Chapter by Chapter
The Complete Foundation Batch PPT Series is structured in the same order as the syllabus table above. Each PPT is designed to cover the most exam-relevant facts from that chapter in a visually organised format. Use the slides for quick revision after reading from a detailed source.
Step 4 – Practice MCQs After Every Chapter
Do not read a chapter and move on without practicing questions. Attempt at least 20–30 MCQs from that chapter immediately after studying it. The Q&A table in every article in this series is a good starting point.
Step 5 – Revise Using PPT Slides in the Last 15 Days
The PPT series is most powerful as a last-mile revision tool. In the 15 days before your exam, go through the PPT slides for each chapter. Because they contain only the most important facts, you can revise the entire History syllabus in 8–10 hours using just the slides.
also read: SSC Computer Class File Extension PPT Slides (LEC #25)
Conclusion
The SSC History syllabus has exactly 35 chapters across Ancient, Medieval, and Modern History. That sounds like a lot – but when you break it down, many chapters can be covered in a single study session of 2–3 hours. The Complete Foundation Batch PPT Series is designed to make this process efficient, structured, and exam-focused.
Use this article as your syllabus reference throughout your preparation. Come back to the topic-wise tables to check your coverage, and use the Q&A table to test your understanding before your exam.
The next lectures in this series dive directly into Ancient Indian History – starting with the Indus Valley Civilization. Stay tuned to this blog for chapter-wise notes, Q&A tables, and podcast-style discussions for every topic in the syllabus.