NCERT Questions CLASS 11 HISTORY CHAPTER 1, WRITING AND CITY LIFE

By gurudev

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Q1. Why do we say that it was not natural fertility and high levels of food production that were the causes of early urbanization?

Ans:

  • Urbanization in Mesopotamia occurred not just due to fertile soil or high food production.
  • It was mainly due to human efforts: construction of canals, organized labor, and centralized authority.
  • The emergence of rulers, temples, and administrative systems enabled cities to grow and function.
  • Hence, planned effort and governance, not just nature, led to urbanization.

Q2. What do ancient stories tell us about the civilization of Mesopotamia?

Ans:

  • Ancient Mesopotamian stories, like the Epic of Gilgamesh, reflect their beliefs, social structure, and values.
  • They highlight the role of kings, gods, cities, and fears like floods.
  • These stories give insight into early urban life, religious practices, and human struggles with nature.


Q1. Why Mesopotamia is considered the beginning of civilization?

Ans:

  • Mesopotamia is the earliest known civilization.
  • It had organized cities, writing (cuneiform), temples, trade, and laws.
  • Urban life, division of labor, centralized rule, and written records all began here.
  • Hence, it marks the birth of civilization.

Q2. How did irrigation help in the development of agriculture in Mesopotamia?

Ans:

  • Mesopotamia had little rainfall, so people built canals from the rivers (Tigris & Euphrates).
  • Irrigation improved water supply, which led to surplus crop production.
  • Surplus food supported population growth, division of labor, and urbanization.

Q3. What was the role of temples in Mesopotamian society?

Ans:

  • Temples were economic, religious, and administrative centers.
  • They owned land, employed farmers and craftsmen, and collected taxes.
  • Priests were powerful and controlled land, trade, and surplus goods.
  • Temples were central to city life and politics.

Q4. Describe the significance of writing in Mesopotamian culture.

Ans:

  • Writing was first used for record-keeping: taxes, trade, land, labor.
  • It helped in administration and planning.
  • Later, writing was used for literature, law, religion, and education.
  • Cuneiform script was a major innovation of Mesopotamia.

Q5. What was the system of trade and exchange in Mesopotamian cities?

Ans:

  • Mesopotamia lacked many natural resources, so trade was vital.
  • They imported wood, metals, stones from places like India, Anatolia, and Iran.
  • Trade was organized by temples, palaces, and private merchants.
  • Barter system was common initially, later silver was used as a medium.

Q6. What are the sources to reconstruct Mesopotamian history?

Ans:

  • Written records on clay tablets (cuneiform).
  • Archaeological evidence – ruins of cities, temples, tools, pottery.
  • Inscriptions and seals, literature, administrative documents.
  • These help historians understand politics, economy, society, and religion.

Q7. Describe the features of Mesopotamian cities.
Ans:

  • Mesopotamian cities like Ur, Uruk, and Mari were planned and organized.
  • Cities had temples (ziggurats), palaces, houses, markets, and granaries.
  • Streets were narrow, houses were made of mud bricks.
  • Cities had drainage systems, canals, and walls for protection.
  • Administrative buildings, writing schools, and religious centers were important parts.

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