Question: One of the famous and controversial person during the freedom struggle who opposed Gandhiji's ideologies of non-violence and non-cooperation was one of these men. Which?
Incorrect Answer
Correct Answer Bose was born in Cuttak. He formed the Indian National Army (INA) to fight the British. He invented the slogan "Jai Hind", which means "Victory to India!" and has a various times been used by Indian nationalists as a kind of "national greeting". (Any similarity to various Fascist greetings used in Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany are of course pure coincidence).
Question: Who was the French governor who was defeated by Robert Clive during the Anglo-French wars in India?
Incorrect Answer
Correct Answer Dupleix (1697-1763) was the governor of the French settlement based in Pondicherry. The first Anglo-French war (commonly refered as the Carnatic Wars) took placed in 1744-1748 AD. The wars between British and French in India lasted from 1744 to 1763 AD.
Correct Answer Raksas was the prime minister of the Nandas, whom Chandragupta defeated with the help of Chanakya. Chandragupta ruled from 322-298 BC. He was succeded by his son Bindusara.
Correct Answer By the end of the third century BC, most of North India was knit together in the first great Indian empire by Chandragupta Maurya. His son Bindusara extended the Mauryan empire over virtually the entire subcontinent, giving rise to an imperial vision that was to dominate successive centuries of political aspirations. The greatest Mauryan emperor was Ashoka (286-231 BC) whose successful campaigns culminated in the annexation of Kalinga (modern Orissa). Overcome by the horrors of war, he was probably the first victorious ruler to renounce war on the battlefield. Ashoka converted to Buddhism, but did not impose his faith on his subjects. Instead, he tried to convert them through edicts inscribed on rock in the local dialects, using the earliest known post-Harappan script known as Brahmi.