In Himachal Pradesh, the word “Pahari” in social context usually points to A Coastal trading identity B Desert nomad identity
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Chapter 11: People, Society, and Demography (Set-3)
In many hill villages of Himachal Pradesh, community identity is often connected strongly with A Coastal fishing belt B Local
Continue readingChapter 11: People, Society, and Demography (Set-2)
In Himachal Pradesh, community diversity is mainly shaped by mountains because A Valleys stay isolated B Only one occupation C
Continue readingChapter 11: People, Society, and Demography (Set-1)
In Himachal Pradesh, “Pahari” identity is most commonly used to describe A Hill-region cultural groups B Coastal fishing communities C
Continue readingChapter 10: Formation and Administrative Evolution (Set-5)
The law that granted full statehood to Himachal Pradesh was passed as the A Government of India Act B Indian
Continue readingChapter 10: Formation and Administrative Evolution (Set-4)
In 1948, Himachal Pradesh was formed mainly by merging several A Coastal port towns B Desert tribal belts C Hill
Continue readingChapter 10: Formation and Administrative Evolution (Set-3)
After 1947, the biggest administrative difficulty in integrating many small hill states was that each had A Same laws everywhere
Continue readingChapter 10: Formation and Administrative Evolution (Set-2)
In the merger process, the first practical step for a hill ruler to join India was signing the A Trade
Continue readingChapter 10: Formation and Administrative Evolution (Set-1)
After Independence, the main legal method used to bring princely hill states into India was signing which document A Permanent
Continue readingChapter 9: British Period and Freedom Struggle (Set-5)
Under British paramountcy, a hill ruler’s “internal autonomy” was most limited when internal actions affected A Frontier security matters B
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