History & Civics
(A) The Anti-Partition movement popularised the idea of Swadeshi and Boycott being complementary and one would not succeed without the other.
(B) The Assertive Nationalist leaders were expelled from the Congress at the Surat session in 1907.
- (B) contradicts (A)
- (B) is the reason for (A)
- (A) is true but (B) is false
- (A) and (B) are independent of each other.
2ⁿᵈ Phase of INM
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Answer
(A) and (B) are independent of each other.
Explanation — The differences between the Assertive Nationalists and Early Nationalists arose soon after the division of Bengal but they parted ways in 1907.
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Related Questions
Early Nationalists : Educated middle class: : Assertive Nationalists: ….?….
- Youth and women
- the British nationals in India.
- the masses
- the Civil servants
(A) Bengal, according to the British, was too big to be efficiently administered by a single provincial government.
(B) The British wanted to stop the rising tide of nationalism by partitioning Bengal.
- (B) contradicts (A)
- (B) is the reason for (A)
- (A) is true but (B) is false.
- (A) and (B) are independent of each other.
(A) The Early Nationalist did not want to extend support to boycott movement.
(B) Boycott was in conflict with their policy of 'petition and persuasion.'
- (B) contradicts (A)
- (B) is the reason for (A)
- (A) is true but (B) is false
- (A) and (B) are independent of each other.
(A) Lord Curzon refused to concede to the demands of annulling the Partition of Bengal.
(B) The administrative capital of British India was shifted from Kolkata to Delhi in 1911.
- (B) contradicts (A)
- (B) is the reason for (A)
- (A) is true but (B) is false
- (A) and (B) are independent of each other.