SSC Modern History The Revolt of 1857 PPT (LEC #28)

This is Lecture 28 (SSC Modern History The Revolt of 1857 PPT (LEC #28) of the Complete Foundation Batch for All SSC Exams – PPT Series by SlidesharePPT. This lecture covers Modern Indian History: The Revolt of 1857 (1857 का विद्रोह) – the single most important event in the entire SSC Modern Indian History syllabus, with 8 to 12 direct MCQs appearing in almost every SSC CGL, SSC CHSL, SSC MTS, SSC GD Constable, and RRB Group D paper.

In this article, you will find a complete study guide built around the 60-slide PPT – covering all causes (political, economic, military, and social-religious), the complete timeline from Mangal Pandey’s firing (March 29, 1857) to Tantya Tope’s hanging (April 18, 1859), all centers of revolt with leaders and their fates, historians’ views including V.D. Savarkar’s banned book, results and consequences including the Government of India Act 1858 and Queen Victoria’s Proclamation, and 30 practice MCQs with answers.

The PPT slides are embedded below – self-made, regularly updated, and fully ready for online and offline classroom use. Whether you are a teacher taking a regular batch or running a full marathon revision session before exams, or a student doing last-minute preparation for your SSC paper, you can view and use all 60 slides directly on any device – no download needed.

Section 1: PPT Resource Overview

PPT RESOURCE OVERVIEW – LEC #28
Complete Foundation Batch for All SSC Exams  |  History PPT Series  |  The Revolt of 1857
Lecture TitleThe Revolt of 1857 (1857 का विद्रोह)
Lecture NumberLecture 28  (LEC #28)
Serial Number#53 in the Complete Foundation Batch PPT Series
Total Slides60 High-Quality PPT Slides
File Size26 MB
SubjectModern Indian History
Series NameComplete Foundation Batch for All SSC and Other Competitive Exams (PPT SERIES)
Target ExamsSSC CGL | SSC CHSL | SSC MTS | SSC GD Constable | RRB Group D | UPSC Prelims | State PSC
Topics CoveredBackground & Causes → Immediate Cause (Greased Cartridges) → Beginning at Meerut → Centers & Leaders → British Suppression → Historians’ Views → Results → Government of India Act 1858 → Queen’s Proclamation
Key PersonalitiesMangal Pandey, Rani Laxmibai, Nana Sahib, Tantya Tope, Kunwar Singh, Begum Hazrat Mahal, Bahadur Shah Zafar, Bakht Khan
Difficulty LevelEasy to Moderate – very direct MCQs; leaders + locations + dates tested repeatedly
Recommended Study1 to 2 days (first read) | Half day (revision using tables)
PPT Sourceslideshareppt.net
Best Combined WithLEC #25 (G-G & Viceroy) + LEC #27 (Civil & Tribal Uprisings) – 1857 is the bridge between the two
Exam Tip: 8–12 direct MCQs from 1857 Revolt appear in every SSC CGL & CHSL – single most important event in Modern Indian History

SSC Modern History The Revolt of 1857 PPT (LEC #28) – iframe and html given below

Note: If you wish to download the Complete SSC series (PPT slides), Simply visit this redirect page. –REDIRECT PAGE.

Section 2: Master Timeline – The Revolt of 1857 (March 1857 to April 1859)

Every key date from the greased cartridge rumours to the execution of Tantya Tope – the complete 1857 story in chronological order.

DateEventDetails & SSC Significance
1856Lord Dalhousie annexes AwadhNawab Wajid Ali Shah exiled; Bengal Army sepoys (majority from Awadh) deeply outraged; direct military grievance created
1856General Service Enlistment ActSepoys required to serve overseas; violates Hindu caste norms (crossing the sea = loss of caste); widespread resentment in Bengal Army
Jan 1857Greased cartridge rumours beginNew Enfield rifles introduced; cartridges allegedly greased with cow fat (Hindu taboo) + pig fat (Muslim taboo); soldiers refused to bite cartridges
29 Mar 1857Mangal Pandey fires first shotsBarrackpore (near Calcutta); Mangal Pandey attacks British officers; arrested; hanged April 8, 1857; first martyr of 1857
24 Apr 185785 sepoys refuse cartridges at Meerut85 soldiers of 3rd Native Cavalry refuse greased cartridges; court-martialled May 9; sentenced to 10 years hard labour
10 May 1857Revolt begins at MeerutSepoys break out comrades from jail; kill British officers; march to Delhi overnight – THE REVOLT OF 1857 BEGINS
11 May 1857Sepoys reach Delhi; Bahadur Shah Zafar proclaimedRebel sepoys reach Red Fort; elderly Mughal Emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar (82 years old) proclaimed leader; Delhi becomes symbolic capital of revolt
June 1857Nana Sahib – Kanpur (Cawnpore)Peshwa’s adopted son Nana Sahib joins revolt; British garrison at Cawnpore surrenders; Satichaura Ghat incident – British prisoners killed; triggers British revenge
June 1857Rani Laxmibai – JhansiRani joins revolt after British refuse to accept her adopted son; defends Jhansi Fort against British forces
June 1857Begum Hazrat Mahal – LucknowWife of exiled Nawab Wajid Ali Shah leads revolt in Lucknow; declared her son Birjis Qadr as Nawab; Lucknow Residency siege begins
July–Aug 1857Kunwar Singh – Bihar80-year-old zamindar of Jagdishpur (Arrah, Bihar) joins revolt; brilliant guerrilla commander despite age; died May 1858
July 1857Bakht Khan – DelhiCommander-in-chief of rebel forces at Delhi; led Bareilly troops to Delhi; real military organizer of Delhi defense
Sep 1857Delhi recaptured by BritishBritish siege of Delhi; John Nicholson leads assault (killed in battle); Delhi falls September 20, 1857; Bahadur Shah Zafar flees to Humayun’s Tomb
Sep 1857Bahadur Shah Zafar capturedCaptured at Humayun’s Tomb by Major William Hodson; his sons Mirza Mughal and Mirza Khizr Sultan shot dead by Hodson; Zafar exiled to Rangoon
Nov 1857Lucknow Residency finally relievedFirst relief by Havelock (September); second relief by Colin Campbell (November); Lucknow finally captured March 1858
Mar 1858Jhansi falls to BritishHugh Rose storms Jhansi; Rani Laxmibai escapes to Kalpi then Gwalior
17 Jun 1858Rani Laxmibai killedRani Laxmibai dies fighting at Kotah-ki-Serai (Gwalior); British General Hugh Rose called her ‘the bravest and best military leader of the rebels’
Jul 1858Nana Sahib escapesNana Sahib flees to Nepal; never captured; fate unknown
18 Apr 1859Tantya Tope executedLast major rebel commander captured and hanged; had fought 150+ battles over 18 months; guerrilla war finally ends
2 Aug 1858Government of India Act 1858EIC formally dissolved; British Crown takes direct control of India; G-G becomes Viceroy; Secretary of State for India created
1 Nov 1858Queen Victoria’s ProclamationRead at Allahabad by Lord Canning; promised: no more annexations, respect for Indian religions and customs, equal treatment in government service; EIC era officially ends

Section 3: Causes of the 1857 Revolt – Complete Table

The causes are divided into four categories. SSC asks both specific causes AND category-level questions (‘Which was the immediate cause?’, ‘Which was a political cause?’).

CategoryCauseDetails & SSC Significance
POLITICALDoctrine of LapseDalhousie’s Doctrine of Lapse annexed Satara, Jhansi, Nagpur; Indian rulers felt no throne was safe; direct threat to princely class
POLITICALAnnexation of Awadh (1856)Annexed on grounds of ‘misgovernance’; Nawab Wajid Ali Shah exiled; deeply offended both rulers and Bengal Army sepoys from Awadh
POLITICALDisrespect to Bahadur Shah ZafarDalhousie announced the Mughal dynasty would end after Bahadur Shah; his successors would not be called ‘Emperor’ – humiliated Muslims across India
POLITICALSubsidiary AllianceDeprived Indian rulers of their armies and sovereignty; created resentment among hundreds of princely states across India
ECONOMICDestruction of Indian IndustriesCheap British manufactured goods destroyed Indian handicrafts – weavers, artisans, craftsmen all displaced; economic ruin of traditional livelihoods
ECONOMICDrain of WealthIndian revenue extracted to Britain; peasants overtaxed; economic resentment widespread across all classes
ECONOMICLand Revenue PoliciesPermanent Settlement, Ryotwari, Mahalwari – all caused massive rural distress; zamindars, taluqdars, and peasants all had grievances
ECONOMICInam Commission (1852)Cancelled rent-free land grants held by thousands of families in Bombay and Madras – left thousands destitute overnight
MILITARYDiscrimination in ArmyIndian sepoys paid less than British; barred from senior ranks; treated with racial contempt; promotions based on race not merit
MILITARYGeneral Service Enlistment Act (1856)Required sepoys to serve overseas; violated Hindu caste norms; crossing the sea meant loss of caste for upper-caste Hindus
MILITARYLoss of Foreign Service AllowanceWhen Awadh was annexed, sepoys lost ‘foreign service’ allowance for serving there – direct pay cut
MILITARYGreased Cartridges (IMMEDIATE CAUSE)Enfield rifle P-53 cartridges allegedly greased with cow (Hindu) + pig (Muslim) fat; soldiers had to bite cartridges; both communities offended simultaneously – the spark that lit the powder keg
SOCIAL/RELIGIOUSChristian Missionary ActivityMissionary schools, charitable activities perceived as prelude to forced conversion; Governor-General Dalhousie allowed missionaries to operate freely
SOCIAL/RELIGIOUSSocial Reform LawsAbolition of Sati (1829), Widow Remarriage Act (1856), Age of Consent discussions – all perceived as British interference in Hindu religion
SOCIAL/RELIGIOUSRacial ArroganceBritish administrators treated Indians with open racial contempt; excluded Indians from clubs, railways (first class), senior positions

Section 4: Centers of Revolt and Their Leaders

Every center, its leader, and key events. This table is the highest MCQ source in the chapter – know every leader’s location and fate.

CenterWhenLeader(s)Key Events & SSC Facts
DelhiMay 11, 1857Bahadur Shah Zafar (symbolic leader) Bakht Khan (military commander)Rebel sepoys from Meerut declared Bahadur Shah Zafar as Emperor; Bakht Khan (from Bareilly) was real military organizer; Delhi fell September 20, 1857; Zafar captured at Humayun’s Tomb; exiled to Rangoon; died 1862
Kanpur (Cawnpore)June 1857Nana Sahib Tantya Tope (general)Nana Sahib = adopted son of last Peshwa Baji Rao II; British garrison surrendered; Satichaura Ghat incident; Nana Sahib fled to Nepal after defeat; never captured; Tantya Tope continued guerrilla war till 1859
LucknowJune 1857Begum Hazrat Mahal Ahmadullah Shah (Maulvi of Faizabad)Wife of exiled Nawab Wajid Ali Shah; declared son Birjis Qadr as Nawab; famous Lucknow Residency siege; Henry Lawrence (British) killed; Havelock’s first relief (Sept); Campbell’s final relief (Nov 1857); Lucknow fell March 1858
JhansiJune 1857Rani LaxmibaiRani = Manikarnika; widowed 1853 when Doctrine of Lapse applied to Jhansi; joined revolt June 1857; defended Jhansi fort; escaped to Kalpi + Gwalior; died fighting June 17, 1858 at Kotah-ki-Serai; Hugh Rose: ‘bravest rebel leader’
Bareilly1857Khan Bahadur KhanGrandson of Rohilla chief Hafiz Rahmat Khan; declared himself Nawab of Bareilly; sent forces to Delhi under Bakht Khan; Bareilly was major revolt center in UP
Bihar (Arrah/Jagdishpur)July 1857Kunwar SinghZamindar of Jagdishpur; 80 years old at revolt time; brilliant guerrilla tactician; crossed Ganga under fire; died May 9, 1858 of battle wounds – one day after his greatest victory; Bihar’s greatest 1857 hero
Faizabad (Awadh)1857Ahmadullah Shah (Maulvi of Faizabad)Called ‘Danka Shah’; religious leader who became military commander; fought brilliantly at Lucknow; killed by Raja of Puwain for reward money offered by British; betrayal-death like Siraj-ud-Daulah
GwaliorJune 1858Rani Laxmibai + Tantya TopeAfter falling back from Jhansi, rebel forces occupied Gwalior with support of some Scindia soldiers; British under Hugh Rose retook Gwalior; Rani killed here; last major battle of 1857
Assam1857Maniram DewanTea planter + estate owner; hanged 1858; first person in Assam executed for 1857 revolt participation
Rajasthan1857Kushal Singh (Tawara)Limited participation; most Rajput princes stayed loyal to British
Punjab1857Limited revoltPunjab recently annexed (1849); heavy British military presence; Sikhs mostly remained loyal (recent enemies of Mughals); revolt did not spread significantly
South India1857Almost no revoltBombay and Madras presidencies relatively quiet; British garrison strength + recent defeat of local powers + distance from main revolt centers

Section 5: Key Heroes – Detailed Profiles

Rani Laxmibai of Jhansi – Most Celebrated Hero

  • Real name: Manikarnika Tambe; born c.1828; married Maharaja Gangadhar Rao of Jhansi
  • Husband died 1853; adopted son Damodar Rao; British refused to recognize adoption under Doctrine of Lapse
  • Joined revolt June 1857; defended Jhansi Fort bravely against Hugh Rose’s forces
  • Escaped to Kalpi with her adopted son tied to her back; then moved to Gwalior
  • Died fighting at Kotah-ki-Serai (Gwalior) on June 17, 1858 – refusing to surrender
  • British commander Hugh Rose wrote: ‘Here lay the rebel Rani of Jhansi – the best and bravest of the rebel leaders’
  • Symbol of Indian resistance; Subhas Chandra Bose named his women’s regiment ‘Rani of Jhansi Regiment’

Bahadur Shah Zafar – The Last Mughal

  • Born 1775; 20th and last Mughal Emperor; primarily a poet (pen name ‘Zafar’ = victory)
  • 82 years old when revolt broke out; reluctant leader – did not plan the revolt but was swept along
  • Captured at Humayun’s Tomb by Major Hodson, September 20, 1857
  • His sons Mirza Mughal and Mirza Khizr Sultan shot dead by Hodson – their heads presented to Zafar
  • Tried for treason; exiled to Rangoon; died November 7, 1862 – far from Delhi
  • Famous couplet expressing his grief: ‘How unfortunate is Zafar, that even for his burial he could not get two yards of earth in the land of his beloved (Delhi)’

Kunwar Singh – The Old Lion of Bihar

  • Born c.1777; zamindar of Jagdishpur, Arrah, Bihar; 80 years old when revolt began
  • Despite age, proved to be one of the most brilliant military commanders of the revolt
  • Led guerrilla campaigns across Bihar, UP, and MP for nearly a year
  • Crossed the Ganga under heavy British fire in April 1858 – epic military feat at age 80+
  • Lost his arm to a British bullet while crossing the Ganga; cut it off himself and offered it to the Ganga
  • Died May 9, 1858 at his ancestral home – one day after his greatest victory; wound from crossing the Ganga
  • April 23 = Kunwar Singh Victory Day (Bihar)

Tantya Tope – Master of Guerrilla Warfare

  • Real name: Ramchandra Pandurang Tope; Nana Sahib’s general and childhood friend
  • After Kanpur fell, continued fighting across central India with Rani Laxmibai and independently
  • Fought approximately 150 battles over 18 months – extraordinary staying power
  • After Rani’s death (June 1858), continued guerrilla war in jungles of central India until April 1859
  • Betrayed by his trusted friend Man Singh (Narwar) who handed him to British for reward money
  • Captured April 7, 1859; tried by military court; hanged April 18, 1859 at Shivpuri, MP
  • Considered the last hero of 1857 – revolt truly ended with his hanging

Section 6: Historians’ Views on the 1857 Revolt

Different historians called the same event by different names. This table is directly asked in SSC – ‘Who called it First War of Independence?’ is a standard MCQ.

View / LabelSchoolProponent(s)Key ArgumentSSC Note
‘Sepoy Mutiny’British HistoriansSir John Seeley, Sir John Lawrence, Lord Canning (initially)Just a military mutiny of disgruntled sepoys; no national character; limited to army; civilian participation was incidentalThis was the OFFICIAL British view used to dismiss the revolt’s political significance; still used in some colonial-era textbooks
‘First War of Indian Independence’Indian Nationalist HistoriansV.D. Savarkar (1909 book – ‘The Indian War of Independence’)A planned, organized war of national liberation; sepoys, princes, peasants, zamindars all united against British; proto-nationalistSavarkar’s book was BANNED by the British – they confiscated it before publication; most nationalistic interpretation
‘Feudal Reaction’Marxist/Left HistoriansR.C. Majumdar, Ramesh Chandra MajumdarA reactionary movement by feudal classes (zamindars, princes, taluqdars) trying to restore the old order; not progressiveEmphasized the self-interested motivation of princes and zamindars rather than nationalist sentiment
‘Nationalist Revolt with Popular Support’Moderate NationalistS.N. Sen, Surendra Nath Sen (Official Historian of India’s Independence)Had elements of both sepoy mutiny AND popular nationalist revolt; broad civilian participation makes it more than a mutinyIndian government appointed S.N. Sen to write official history; called it a revolt with genuine nationalist character
‘Civilizational Clash’Cultural HistoriansRepresented a conflict between two civilizations – Indian and British; revolt was the expression of a cultural crisisLess frequently cited in SSC; occasionally in UPSC context
Mixed / BothBalanced View – Modern ConsensusMost modern Indian historiansBoth a sepoy mutiny AND a popular uprising with proto-nationalist elements; not fully organized nationalism but clearly more than just a military mutinyModern school textbooks adopt this balanced view; SSC tends to favor V.D. Savarkar’s ‘First War of Independence’ terminology

Section 7: Results and Consequences of 1857

Immediate Consequences

  • Government of India Act 1858: EIC formally dissolved; British Crown takes direct control; Secretary of State for India (Cabinet minister in London) created with 15-member India Council
  • Governor-General’s post renamed Viceroy: Lord Canning = first Viceroy; represented Crown directly
  • Queen Victoria’s Proclamation (November 1, 1858): Read at Allahabad by Canning; promised – no more annexations, equal access to civil service, respect for religions; in practice many promises were not kept
  • End of Mughal dynasty: Bahadur Shah Zafar was the last; no successor recognized; 300-year Mughal dynasty ended

Military Reorganization

  • British-to-Indian soldier ratio increased: In Bengal Army – from 1:7 to 1:2; in Bombay/Madras – 1:3
  • Artillery exclusively placed under British control – no Indian soldier could operate artillery
  • Indian soldiers reorganized by caste, class, and religion to prevent inter-community solidarity
  • Gurkha, Sikh, and Pathan regiments expanded – communities that had stayed loyal or helped British

Long-term Impact on Indian Nationalism

  • 1857 proved Indians could unite across religion, caste, and region – a foundational lesson for later nationalism
  • Failure of 1857 showed the need for organized political movement with modern methods → Indian National Congress (1885)
  • Queen’s Proclamation promise of equal civil service opportunity → Indians demanded actual implementation → Civil Service agitation
  • 1857 became the central myth of Indian nationalism – every later movement invoked 1857 martyrs
SSC Modern History The Revolt of 1857 PPT (LEC #28)
SSC Modern History The Revolt of 1857 PPT (LEC #28)

Section 8: Podcast Q&A – Most Frequently Confused Topics

#QuestionExpert Answer – Exam-Focused
Q1What was the immediate cause of the 1857 Revolt? Why did the greased cartridge become so explosive?The immediate cause was the introduction of the new Enfield P-53 rifle in the British Indian Army. The rifle required soldiers to bite off the end of a greased cartridge before loading. The rumour – which spread rapidly through army cantonments – was that the grease was made from a mixture of cow fat (forbidden to Hindus) and pig fat (forbidden to Muslims). This was explosive because: (1) It offended BOTH major religious communities simultaneously – a rare combination; (2) It confirmed the deep fear that the British were trying to destroy Indian religion through the army; (3) It came on top of years of accumulated military and social grievances; (4) The cartridge issue was the one visible, tangible grievance that united Hindu and Muslim sepoys. The British argued the grease was made from mutton fat and linseed oil, but by then the rumour had already spread and the damage was done. SSC MCQ: ‘Immediate cause of 1857 revolt?’ → Greased cartridges of Enfield P-53 rifle.
Q2Who was Mangal Pandey and why is he important? What exactly did he do?Mangal Pandey was a sepoy in the 34th Bengal Native Infantry, stationed at Barrackpore (near Calcutta). On March 29, 1857, he attacked and wounded two British officers – Lieutenant Baugh and Sergeant-Major Hewson – shouting anti-British slogans and urging his fellow sepoys to revolt. He was overpowered, court-martialled, and hanged on April 8, 1857. His regiment was subsequently disbanded. Why he is important: (1) He is considered the first visible symbol of the 1857 revolt; (2) The British initially called all Indian rebel sepoys ‘Pandeys’ – which is why the English slang word ‘Pandy’ was used for any rebel Indian soldier; (3) He is officially recognized as a martyr of India’s independence struggle; (4) His actions at Barrackpore predated the Meerut uprising by 6 weeks, showing the tension was already at breaking point. SSC MCQ: ‘First martyr of 1857?’ → Mangal Pandey. ‘Where did Mangal Pandey fire?’ → Barrackpore.
Q3What happened to the main leaders of 1857 revolt? Know each leader’s fate.Every leader’s fate is a potential SSC MCQ: (1) Bahadur Shah Zafar: Captured at Humayun’s Tomb by Major William Hodson; his two sons shot dead by Hodson in cold blood; Zafar exiled to Rangoon, Burma; died there on November 7, 1862; buried in Rangoon (now Yangon, Myanmar); (2) Rani Laxmibai: Died fighting at Kotah-ki-Serai near Gwalior, June 17, 1858; Hugh Rose praised her; (3) Nana Sahib: Fled to Nepal after defeat; never captured; fate unknown – probably died in Nepal; (4) Tantya Tope: Betrayed by his own friend Man Singh (Narwar); captured April 7, 1859; hanged April 18, 1859 at Shivpuri (MP); (5) Begum Hazrat Mahal: Fled to Nepal; died in Kathmandu (1879); (6) Kunwar Singh: Died of battle wounds May 9, 1858 – one day after his greatest victory crossing the Ganga; (7) Bakht Khan: Died in battle near Terai (1859). Pattern: Most leaders either died fighting, were hanged, or fled to Nepal.
Q4Why did the revolt fail? What were the main reasons for its defeat?The 1857 Revolt failed due to six key weaknesses: (1) Limited geographic spread: The revolt was concentrated mainly in UP, Bihar, Delhi, and parts of MP; Punjab, Bengal, Bombay, Madras, and South India were largely unaffected; (2) No unified leadership: Bahadur Shah Zafar was a symbolic figurehead, not a real commander; no single leader could coordinate all the centers; (3) Divided loyalties: Sikh soldiers (recently defeated by Mughals) generally stayed loyal to British; Gurkhas and many Rajput princes also supported British; (4) Military superiority: British had electric telegraph (1851 – could coordinate instantly), railways (could move troops rapidly), and superior artillery; (5) Timing failures: Various centers revolted at different times – Meerut (May 10), Lucknow (June), Jhansi (June); no simultaneous coordinated attack; (6) No support from educated Indians: The new English-educated class (product of Macaulay’s education) largely supported the British – the reform movement and the revolt were pulling in opposite directions.
Q5What were the results and consequences of the 1857 Revolt?The revolt had six major consequences that are directly asked in SSC: (1) End of EIC rule: Government of India Act 1858 – East India Company formally dissolved; British Crown took direct control; (2) Viceroy system: Governor-General’s title changed to Viceroy – representative of the Crown; Lord Canning became first Viceroy; (3) Queen Victoria’s Proclamation (November 1, 1858): Read at Allahabad by Canning; promised no more annexations, respect for Indian religions, equal government service opportunities – but largely ignored in practice; (4) Army reorganization: Ratio of British to Indian soldiers increased; artillery placed exclusively under British control; Indian soldiers grouped by class/religion to prevent unified revolt (divide and rule in the army); (5) End of Mughal dynasty: Bahadur Shah Zafar was last Mughal emperor – dynasty ended with his capture; (6) End of Peshwaship permanently: Nana Sahib’s exile ended any Maratha political claims. Long-term consequence: The revolt planted seeds of organized Indian nationalism – the failures of 1857 taught Indians they needed better organization, broader social base, and modern political methods → led to founding of INC in 1885.
Q6What are the different names given to the 1857 Revolt and which historians gave them?The 1857 event has been called by five different names reflecting different political perspectives: (1) ‘Sepoy Mutiny’: British colonial historians (Seeley, Lawrence, Malleson) – minimized it as a military incident without political significance; (2) ‘First War of Indian Independence’: V.D. Savarkar (1909 book ‘The Indian War of Independence 1857’) – most nationalist interpretation; book was BANNED by British; (3) ‘Mutiny and a Civilizational Conflict’: Some British historians who acknowledged civilian participation but still denied nationalist character; (4) ‘A Feudal Revolt’: Marxist historians (R.C. Majumdar) – saw it as reactionary, led by feudal classes trying to restore old order; (5) ‘A National Revolt with Mass Participation’: S.N. Sen (Indian government’s official historian) – balanced view, acknowledged both military and civilian dimensions. SSC MCQ pattern: ‘Who called 1857 revolt the First War of Independence?’ → V.D. Savarkar. ‘Whose book on 1857 was banned by British?’ → V.D. Savarkar’s ‘The Indian War of Independence.’

Section 9: 30 High-Frequency MCQs with Answers

Based on previous SSC CGL, CHSL, MTS, and GD Constable papers. Target: 27+ correct.

#QuestionAnswer
01The Revolt of 1857 began at which place and on which date?Meerut – May 10, 1857
02What was the immediate cause of the 1857 Revolt?Greased cartridges of the new Enfield P-53 rifle (cow + pig fat)
03Who was the first martyr of the 1857 Revolt?Mangal Pandey – hanged April 8, 1857 at Barrackpore
04Where did Mangal Pandey fire and attack British officers?Barrackpore (near Calcutta)
05Who was proclaimed the symbolic leader of the 1857 Revolt at Delhi?Bahadur Shah Zafar (last Mughal Emperor, 82 years old)
06Who was the real military commander of rebel forces at Delhi?Bakht Khan – led Bareilly troops to Delhi
07Bahadur Shah Zafar was captured at which location?Humayun’s Tomb, Delhi – by Major William Hodson
08Where was Bahadur Shah Zafar exiled and where did he die?Exiled to Rangoon (Yangon, Myanmar); died November 7, 1862
09Who led the revolt in Kanpur (Cawnpore)?Nana Sahib (adopted son of last Peshwa Baji Rao II)
10What was Tantya Tope’s fate?Betrayed by Man Singh; captured April 7, 1859; hanged April 18, 1859 at Shivpuri (MP)
11Who led the revolt in Lucknow?Begum Hazrat Mahal (wife of exiled Nawab Wajid Ali Shah)
12What was the name of Begum Hazrat Mahal’s son declared as Nawab?Birjis Qadr
13Who led the revolt in Bihar and how old was he?Kunwar Singh – 80 years old; zamindar of Jagdishpur, Arrah
14Rani Laxmibai was the queen of which state?Jhansi (UP) – also called Manikarnika
15Where and when did Rani Laxmibai die?June 17, 1858 – Kotah-ki-Serai, near Gwalior
16Which British general called Rani Laxmibai ‘the bravest and best military leader of the rebels’?Hugh Rose
17Who called the 1857 revolt the ‘First War of Indian Independence’?V.D. Savarkar – in his 1909 book (which was BANNED by British)
18Who called it a ‘Sepoy Mutiny’?British historians – Sir John Seeley, Sir John Lawrence
19Government of India Act 1858 did what?Dissolved EIC; Crown rule; G-G became Viceroy; Secretary of State for India created
20Queen Victoria’s Proclamation was read where and by whom?Allahabad – November 1, 1858 – by Lord Canning
21Who was the first Viceroy of India?Lord Canning (previously last G-G)
22General Service Enlistment Act (1856) required what?Sepoys to serve overseas – violated Hindu caste norms (crossing sea = loss of caste)
23Why did Punjab NOT revolt significantly in 1857?Sikhs recently defeated by Mughals; heavy British garrison; Punjab recently annexed (1849)
24Ahmadullah Shah (Maulvi of Faizabad) was called?‘Danka Shah’ – brilliant military commander at Lucknow; betrayed and killed for British reward money
25Nana Sahib’s fate after 1857?Fled to Nepal; never captured; fate unknown
26What was the Satichaura Ghat incident?British prisoners killed at Kanpur while surrendering – triggered British revenge attacks
27Which regiment was Mangal Pandey part of?34th Bengal Native Infantry – disbanded after his revolt
28Begum Hazrat Mahal fled where after defeat?Nepal – died in Kathmandu (1879)
29Major reason the revolt failed was?Limited geographic spread + no unified leadership + British military superiority (telegraph + railways)
30V.D. Savarkar’s book on 1857 was titled?‘The Indian War of Independence 1857’ (1909) – banned by British before publication

Also read: SSC Modern History Civil and Tribal Uprising PPT (LEC #27)

Section 10: Rapid Revision – Last-Day Cheat Sheet

Key Dates – Must Know

  • March 29, 1857 → Mangal Pandey fires at Barrackpore
  • April 8, 1857 → Mangal Pandey hanged
  • May 10, 1857 → Revolt BEGINS at Meerut
  • May 11, 1857 → Sepoys reach Delhi; Zafar proclaimed leader
  • September 20, 1857 → Delhi recaptured; Zafar captured
  • June 17, 1858 → Rani Laxmibai killed at Gwalior
  • August 2, 1858 → Government of India Act – EIC ends
  • November 1, 1858 → Queen Victoria’s Proclamation at Allahabad
  • April 18, 1859 → Tantya Tope hanged – revolt ends

Leaders → Centers

  • Delhi → Bahadur Shah Zafar (symbolic) + Bakht Khan (military)
  • Kanpur → Nana Sahib + Tantya Tope
  • Lucknow → Begum Hazrat Mahal + Ahmadullah Shah
  • Jhansi → Rani Laxmibai
  • Bihar (Arrah) → Kunwar Singh
  • Bareilly → Khan Bahadur Khan

Historians → What They Called It

  • V.D. Savarkar → First War of Indian Independence (book BANNED)
  • British historians → Sepoy Mutiny
  • S.N. Sen → National Revolt with mass participation
  • R.C. Majumdar → Feudal Revolt (reactionary)

Fates – Most Asked

  • Bahadur Shah Zafar → Exiled to Rangoon → died 1862
  • Rani Laxmibai → Died fighting June 17, 1858 → Gwalior
  • Nana Sahib → Fled to Nepal → never captured
  • Tantya Tope → Hanged April 18, 1859 → Shivpuri, MP
  • Begum Hazrat Mahal → Fled to Nepal → died 1879
  • Kunwar Singh → Died of wounds May 9, 1858 → Jagdishpur

Conclusion

The Revolt of 1857 (LEC #28) is the single most important event in SSC Modern Indian History. It is the hinge between the era of British expansion and the era of organized Indian nationalism. The 60-slide PPT gives you the visual narrative; this guide organizes every cause, leader, center, historian’s view, and consequence into focused tables for exam-ready revision. Master the Timeline, Causes Table, Centers Table, and 30 MCQs – and this chapter will deliver marks in every SSC paper you sit.

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