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nep, colonies and renaissance

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119 views9 pages

Assignment

nep, colonies and renaissance

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Payal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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1.

Ancient and Medieval Period emphasis on science, vocational education, and


national integration.
Gurukul System (Vedic Age): Education was
mainly religious and moral, centered around the National Policy on Education (NPE) 1968: First
guru. Focus on Sanskrit literature, Vedas, national policy; stressed free and compulsory
philosophy, and warfare skills. education for children up to 14 years and
development of regional languages.
Buddhist Monastic Education: Nalanda,
Takshashila, Vikramashila became centers of
higher learning; emphasis on logic, medicine,
4. NPE 1986 and Revisions
astronomy, and grammar.
National Policy on Education 1986 (Rajiv Gandhi
Medieval Period: Madrasas and Maktabs under
govt.): Focus on universal access, adult literacy,
the Delhi Sultanate and Mughal rule, focus on
equal educational opportunities for women,
Persian, Arabic, theology, mathematics, and law.
SC/ST, and minorities.

Programme of Action (1992): Updated NPE with


2. Colonial Period (1757–1947) emphasis on decentralization, vocationalization,
and teacher training.
Early Colonial Era: Indigenous education systems
still functioned, but British influence began to Initiatives like Operation Blackboard to improve
reshape education. primary school facilities.

Wood’s Dispatch (1854): Considered the “Magna


Carta” of English education in India; promoted
English as a medium and teacher training
institutions. 5. Right to Education and Early 21st Century

Hunter Commission (1882): Emphasized primary Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan (2001): Massive program
education and female education. for universalizing elementary education.

Saddler Commission (1917–19): Reforms for Right to Education Act (2009): Made education a
university education and curriculum. fundamental right for children aged 6–14.

Government of India Act, 1935: Transferred Rashtriya Madhyamik Shiksha Abhiyan (2009):
education to provincial control. Strengthened secondary education.

Education was elitist, urban-focused, and geared


toward producing clerical workers for
6. National Education Policy (NEP) 2020
administration.
Replaces NPE 1986.
3. Post-Independence Era (1947–1986)
Major Highlights:
University Education Commission (1948–49):
Chaired by Dr. S. Radhakrishnan; focus on higher 5+3+3+4 school structure (instead of 10+2).
education quality.
Early childhood care & education from age 3.
Secondary Education Commission (1952–53):
Multilingualism and mother-tongue instruction till
Aimed to modernize school education.
at least Grade 5.
Education Commission (Kothari Commission,
Emphasis on skill development, coding, and
1964–66): Recommended 10+2+3 system,
vocational training from early grades.
Flexible subject choices; no rigid separation  Guinea
between arts, commerce, science.  Ivory Coast (Côte d’Ivoire)
 Burkina Faso
50% Gross Enrollment Ratio target in higher
 Benin (Dahomey)
education by 2035.
 Mauritania
National Testing Agency (NTA) for standardized
Central Africa (French Equatorial Africa):
entrance exams.
 Chad
 Central African Republic
FRENCH COLONIES  Republic of the Congo
 Gabon
1. North America
Other African Territories:
New France (Canada, parts of USA)
 Madagascar
 Canada (Quebec, Ontario, Newfoundland,
 Comoros (Mayotte still French)
Nova Scotia, New Brunswick)
 Djibouti (French Somaliland)
 Louisiana Territory (Mississippi River
 Réunion (still French)
basin, later sold to USA in 1803)
 Seychelles (briefly)
 Great Lakes region
 Mauritius (briefly)
Caribbean Colonies:  Cape Verde (briefly)
 São Tomé and Príncipe (briefly)
 Saint-Domingue (now Haiti)
 Guadeloupe
 Martinique
 Saint Lucia 4. Asia
 Dominica
 Saint Kitts India (French India):
 Saint Barthélemy  Pondicherry (Puducherry)
 Saint Pierre and Miquelon (still French)
 Karaikal
 Grenada (briefly)
 Tobago (briefly)  Mahé
 Yanaon (Yanam)
 Chandernagore
2. South America - French Guiana (still French
territory) ; Short-lived colonies in Brazil (e.g., Southeast Asia:
France Antarctique, 1555–1567; France  French Indochina
Équinoxiale, 1612–1615)  Vietnam
3. Africa  Laos
 Cambodia
North Africa:
Middle East (Mandates after WWI):
 Algeria (1830–1962)
 Tunisia (Protectorate, 1881–1956)  Syria
 Morocco (Protectorate, 1912–1956)  Lebanon

West Africa (French West Africa):

 Senegal 5. Oceania
 Mali  New Caledonia (still French)
 Niger
 French Polynesia (still French)  Suriname (Dutch Guiana; kept until 1975
 Wallis and Futuna (still French) independence)
 Clipperton Island (still French)  Parts of Guyana (formerly Essequibo,
 Short-lived presence in parts of Australia Demerara, Berbice)
(early explorers, not permanent colonies)  Parts of Brazil (New Holland, 1630–1654
— Pernambuco, Recife, and surrounding
6. Current French Overseas Territories
areas)
Americas: Guadeloupe, Martinique, Saint Pierre
and Miquelon, French Guiana, Saint Barthélemy,
Saint Martin 3. Africa

Africa/Indian Ocean: Mayotte, Réunion,  South Africa (Cape Colony, 1652–1795;


Scattered Islands retaken 1803–1806 before British control)
 Ghana (Dutch Gold Coast, 1598–1872 —
Pacific: New Caledonia, French Polynesia, Wallis
forts such as Elmina)
and Futuna
 Mauritius (1638–1710)
Uninhabited islands: Clipperton Island, French  Senegal (Gorée Island, briefly)
Southern and Antarctic Lands  Angola (Luanda, briefly under Dutch rule,
1641–1648)

DUTCH COLONIES
4. Asia
1. North America
Indian Subcontinent:
New Netherland (1614–1664):
 Cochin (Kochi, Kerala)
 New Amsterdam (now New York City)
 Nagapattinam (Tamil Nadu)
 Parts of New Jersey
 Tuticorin (Tamil Nadu)
 Parts of Delaware
 Masulipatnam (Andhra Pradesh)
 Parts of Connecticut
 Surat (Gujarat)
Caribbean / West Indies (Dutch West India  Pulicat (Tamil Nadu) — main VOC
Company): headquarters in India
 Curaçao (still Dutch)
 Aruba (still Dutch) Sri Lanka (Dutch Ceylon, 1658–1796)
 Bonaire (still Dutch)
Indonesia (Dutch East Indies — the largest
 Sint Eustatius (still Dutch)
colony):
 Saba (still Dutch)
 Sint Maarten (still Dutch)  Java
 Tobago (briefly)  Sumatra
 Tortola (briefly)  Borneo (Kalimantan)
 Saint Croix (briefly)  Sulawesi
 Saint Thomas (briefly)  Maluku Islands (Spice Islands)
 Bali
 Timor (western part)
2. South America
Malaysia:

 Malacca (1641–1824)
Taiwan (Formosa, 1624–1662)

Japan (Dejima trading post in Nagasaki, 1641– East Africa:


1854 — not a colony but exclusive trade base)
 Mozambique (until 1975)
Yemen (Mocha, briefly)  Sofala (Mozambique, 1505–1898)
 Mombasa (Kenya, 1593–1729
Iran (Bandar Abbas, briefly)
intermittently)
 Zanzibar (briefly)
 Kilwa Kisiwani (Tanzania, 1505–1512)
5. Oceania
Islands in the Atlantic:
 Western New Guinea (part of Dutch East
Indies until 1962)  Madeira (since 1419, still part of Portugal)
 Tasmania & parts of Australia (early Dutch  Azores (since 1432, still part of Portugal)
exploration, but no permanent colony)

2. Asia
6. Present Dutch Territories
Middle East & Persian Gulf:
These remain part of the Kingdom of the
 Ormuz (Iran, 1515–1622)
Netherlands:
 Muscat (Oman, 1507–1650)
In the Caribbean:  Bahrain (1521–1602)
 Qeshm Island (Iran, briefly)
 Aruba
 Curaçao Indian Subcontinent:
 Sint Maarten
 Goa (1510–1961)
 Bonaire
 Daman and Diu (until 1961)
 Sint Eustatius
 Dadra and Nagar Haveli (until 1961)
 Saba
 Chaul (Maharashtra, until 1740s)
 Vasai (Bassein, Maharashtra, until 1739)
 Mangalore (briefly)
PORTUGUESE COLONIES
 Cochin (Kochi, until 1663)
1. Africa  Cannanore (Kannur, until 1663)
 Surat (briefly)
West Africa:
 Bombay (given to Britain in 1661 as part of
 Ceuta (1415–1640) – first overseas colony Catherine of Braganza’s dowry)
 Tangier (Morocco, 1471–1661)
Sri Lanka:
 Arguin (Mauritania, 1445–1633)
 São Tomé and Príncipe (still Portuguese  Colombo, Galle, and coastal areas (1505–
until 1975) 1658)
 Annobón (now Equatorial Guinea)
 Guinea-Bissau (Portuguese Guinea, until
1974) Southeast Asia:
 Cape Verde (until 1975)
 Malacca (Malaysia, 1511–1641)
 Elmina (Ghana, 1482–1637)
 Timor (East Timor, until 1975)
 Angola (until 1975)
 Flores and Solor (Indonesia)
 Makassar (Sulawesi, briefly)  Texas (as part of New Spain)
 California (Alta California)
China & East Asia:
 New Mexico
 Macau (1557–1999)  Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Colorado (parts)
 Ningbo, Quanzhou, and other early trade  Louisiana (1762–1800)
bases in China (brief)  Northern Mexico (Baja California, Sonora,
 Nagasaki (Dejima, Japan — shared trade Chihuahua, etc.)
rights)
Caribbean:
 Taiwan (brief presence in 1626–1642 in
Keelung & Tamsui)  Cuba (1492–1898)
 Hispaniola (Dominican Republic and Haiti’s
western part briefly)
3. Americas  Puerto Rico (1493–1898)
 Jamaica (until 1655)
South America:
 Trinidad (until 1797)
 Brazil (1500–1822) — included vast  The Bahamas (briefly)
Amazon and inland areas  Cayman Islands (briefly)
North America & Caribbean: Central America:
 Newfoundland (Canada, fishing  Guatemala
settlements)  Belize (partially, before British takeover)
 Barbados (briefly)  Honduras
 Trinidad (briefly)  El Salvador
 Nicaragua
 Costa Rica
4. Pacific & Other Territories  Panama
 Several islands in the Pacific discovered South America:
and claimed but not colonized
 Venezuela
permanently (Marianas, Caroline Islands
 Colombia
— later taken by Spain)
 Ecuador
 Parts of Papua New Guinea (briefly)
 Peru
 Bolivia
5. Present Portuguese Territories  Paraguay
 Argentina
 Madeira  Chile
 Azores  Uruguay

2. Africa
SPANISH COLONIES North Africa:
1. Americas (Largest Part of the Spanish Empire)  Ceuta (held briefly before Portuguese took
North America: it)
 Melilla (still Spanish)
 Florida (1513–1763; 1783–1821)
 Oran, Mers El Kébir (Algeria, 1509–1708;  Alhucemas, Chafarinas Islands, Peñón de
1732–1792) Vélez de la Gomera (small North African
 Tripoli (briefly) enclaves)
 West Africa:
 Canary Islands (still Spanish)
 Spanish Sahara (now Western Sahara) BRITISH COLONIES
 Equatorial Guinea (Fernando Po / Bioko,
1.Americas
Annobón, Río Muni)
 Cape Verde (briefly, before Portuguese North America:
control)
 Thirteen Colonies (USA): Virginia,
Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
Maryland, Connecticut, Rhode Island,
3. Asia
Delaware, North Carolina, South Carolina,
South Asia: New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
Georgia
 No permanent mainland colonies, but
 Canada: Newfoundland, Nova Scotia,
Manila–Acapulco trade route brought
Prince Edward Island, Quebec, Ontario,
Spanish presence to India’s Goa and
Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British
Gujarat via Portuguese alliance.
Columbia
Southeast Asia:  Bermuda (still British Overseas Territory)

 Philippines (1565–1898) – included Luzon,


Visayas, Mindanao
Caribbean:
 Palau, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands
(until 1898)  Jamaica (1655–1962)
 Caroline Islands (sold to Germany in 1899)  Barbados (1627–1966)
 Bahamas (1718–1973)
China / East Asia:
 Trinidad and Tobago (1797–1962)
 Manila had active trade with China and  Saint Kitts and Nevis
Japan; small enclaves in Macau (through  Antigua and Barbuda
Portuguese)  Saint Lucia (often changed hands with
France)
 Grenada
4. Oceania  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
 Dominica
 Micronesian islands (Marianas, Carolines,
 Montserrat (still British)
Palau)
 Cayman Islands (still British)
 Guam (1498–1898)
 Turks and Caicos Islands (still British)
 Wake Island (claimed, but not strongly
 Anguilla (still British)
occupied)
 British Virgin Islands (still British)
5. Present Spanish Territories Overseas

 Canary Islands (off Africa)


South America:
 Ceuta and Melilla (North Africa)
 British Guiana (now Guyana)
 Falkland Islands (still British)
Middle East:

2. Africa  Aden (Yemen)


 Kuwait (protectorate)
North Africa:
 Bahrain (protectorate)
 Egypt (1882–1956)  Qatar (protectorate)
 Sudan (with Egypt, Anglo-Egyptian Sudan)  United Arab Emirates (Trucial States)
 Palestine (Mandate)
West Africa:
 Iraq (Mandate)
 Gambia  Jordan (Transjordan, Mandate)
 Sierra Leone
Southeast Asia:
 Ghana (Gold Coast)
 Nigeria  Malaysia (Malaya, Penang, Malacca,
Singapore)
East Africa:
 Brunei (protectorate)
 Kenya  North Borneo (Sabah)
 Uganda  Sarawak
 Tanzania (Tanganyika, Zanzibar briefly)
East Asia:
 Somalia (British Somaliland)
 Hong Kong (1842–1997)
Southern Africa:
 Weihaiwei (China, leasehold 1898–1930)
 South Africa (Cape Colony, Natal,
Transvaal, Orange Free State)
 Botswana (Bechuanaland) 4. Oceania & Pacific
 Lesotho (Basutoland)
 Australia (New South Wales, Victoria,
 Eswatini (Swaziland)
Queensland, South Australia, Western
 Zambia (Northern Rhodesia)
Australia, Tasmania)
 Zimbabwe (Southern Rhodesia)
 New Zealand
 Malawi (Nyasaland)
 Fiji
Atlantic Islands:  Papua New Guinea (Papua)
 Solomon Islands
 Saint Helena, Ascension, Tristan da Cunha
 Kiribati (Gilbert Islands)
(still British)
 Tuvalu (Ellice Islands)
 Pitcairn Islands (still British)
 Nauru (co-administered with Australia &
New Zealand)

3. Asia
5. Present British Overseas Territories
South Asia:
 Anguilla
 India (British Raj: present-day India,  Bermuda
Pakistan, Bangladesh)  British Antarctic Territory
 Burma (Myanmar)  British Indian Ocean Territory
 Ceylon (Sri Lanka)  British Virgin Islands
 Maldives (protectorate)  Cayman Islands
 Falkland Islands
 Desiderius Erasmus (1466–1536): Scholar
 Gibraltar
 Montserrat from Holland who defined the humanist
 Pitcairn Islands movement in Northern Europe. Translator
 Saint Helena, Ascension, Tristan da Cunha of the New Testament into Greek.
 South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands
 Rene Descartes (1596–1650): French
 Sovereign Base Areas of Akrotiri and
Dhekelia (Cyprus) philosopher and mathematician regarded as
 Turks and Caicos Islands the father of modern philosophy. Famous
for stating, “I think; therefore I am.”

The Renaissance was a groundbreaking period in  Galileo (1564-1642): Italian astronomer,


history that spanned from the 14th to the 17th physicist and engineer whose pioneering
century, marking a major shift in the cultural and work with telescopes enabled him to
intellectual landscape of Europe. It was
describes the moons of Jupiter and rings of
characterized by a renewed interest in the arts,
literature, science, and philosophy, fueled by a Saturn. Placed under house arrest for his
desire to rediscover the knowledge of ancient views of a heliocentric universe.
civilizations. This era saw a significant departure  Nicolaus Copernicus (1473–1543):
from the medieval mindset, paving the way for
Mathematician and astronomer who made
modern society.
first modern scientific argument for the
During the Renaissance, society experienced a
surge in creativity and innovation, with many concept of a heliocentric solar system.
prominent figures emerging and leaving their  Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679): English
mark on history. Among them were Leonardo da philosopher and author of “Leviathan.”
Vinci, who revolutionized art with his intricate
 Geoffrey Chaucer (1343–1400): English poet
paintings like the Mona Lisa and The Last Supper;
William Shakespeare, who transformed literature and author of “The Canterbury Tales.”
with his timeless plays; and Galileo Galilei, who  Giotto (1266-1337): Italian painter and
made groundbreaking discoveries in the field of architect whose more realistic depictions of
astronomy.
human emotions influenced generations of
The Renaissance was a transformative era that
artists. Best known for his frescoes in the
redefined our understanding of art, philosophy,
literature, and science, setting the stage for the Scrovegni Chapel in Padua.
modern world we know today. Its enduring  Dante (1265–1321): Italian philosopher,
influence continues to inspire and shape poet, writer and political thinker who
contemporary culture.
authored “The Divine Comedy.”
Famous Renaissance People:  Niccolo Machiavelli (1469–1527): Italian
diplomat and philosopher famous for
 Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519): Italian
writing “The Prince” and “The Discourses on
painter, architect, inventor and
Livy.”
“Renaissance man” responsible for painting
“The Mona Lisa” and “The Last Supper."
 Titian (1488–1576): Italian painter
celebrated for his portraits of Pope Paul III
and Charles I and his later religious and
mythical paintings like “Venus and Adonis.”
 William Tyndale (1494–1536): English
biblical translator, humanist and scholar
burned at the stake for translating the Bible
into English.
 William Byrd (1539/40–1623): English
composer known for his development of the
English madrigal and his religious organ
music.
 John Milton (1608–1674): English poet and
historian who wrote the epic poem
“Paradise Lost.”
 William Shakespeare (1564–1616):
England’s “national poet” and the most
famous playwright of all time, celebrated for
his sonnets and plays like “Romeo and
Juliet."
 Donatello (1386–1466): Italian sculptor
celebrated for lifelike sculptures like
“David,” commissioned by the Medici
family.
 Sandro Botticelli (1445–1510): Italian
painter of “Birth of Venus.”
 Raphael (1483–1520): Italian painter who
learned from da Vinci and Michelangelo.
Best known for his paintings of the
Madonna and “The School of Athens.”
 Michelangelo (1475–1564): Italian sculptor,
painter and architect who carved “David”
and painted The Sistine Chapel in Rome.

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