1. Who delivered the Allahabad Address in 1930?
(A) Mahatma Gandhi
(B) Muhammad Ali Jinnah
(C) Liaquat Ali Khan
(D) Allama Iqbal
2. Where was the Allahabad Address delivered?
(A) Allahabad
(B) Delhi
(C) Lahore
(D) Karachi
3. The Allahabad Address is also known for presenting the idea of:
(A) Indian independence under Congress
(B) Non-Cooperation Movement
(C) Hindu-Muslim unity
(D) Pakistan – a separate homeland for Muslims
4. Which organization was associated with the platform of the Allahabad Address?
(A) Indian National Congress
(B) All-India Muslim Educational Conference
(C) All India Muslim League
(D) Khilafat Committee
5. Which provinces did Iqbal suggest as suitable for a Muslim homeland?
(A) Bengal and Assam
(B) Bombay and Madras
(C) Punjab, Sindh, NWFP, and Balochistan
(D) Bihar and Orissa
6. What was the main political idea presented by Iqbal in the address?
(A) Muslim political unity and self-determination
(B) Hindu-Muslim integration
(C) Immediate armed revolt
(D) Full acceptance of British rule
7. The Allahabad Address emphasized the preservation of:
(A) Hindu political rights
(B) Muslim cultural and political identity
(C) British economic policies
(D) Joint electorates
8. Allahabad Address is considered the foundation of:
(A) Pakistan Movement
(B) Simon Commission reforms
(C) Non-Cooperation Movement
(D) Rowlatt Act implementation
9. Iqbal warned against:
(A) British withdrawal
(B) Hindu domination over Muslims
(C) Muslim League formation
(D) Economic reforms
10. The Allahabad Address proposed that Muslims in India were:
(A) A minority to be assimilated
(B) Subordinate to British authority
(C) Fully integrated under Congress
(D) A separate nation with distinct identity
11. According to Iqbal, a Muslim state should follow:
(A) Secular Western laws
(B) Complete British administration
(C) Islamic social and political ideals
(D) Hindu cultural norms
12. Which movement’s leaders were inspired by the Allahabad Address?
(A) Khilafat Movement
(B) Pakistan Movement
(C) Non-Cooperation Movement
(D) Civil Disobedience Movement
13. Iqbal’s vision focused on:
(A) Economic development only
(B) Political and cultural unity of Muslims
(C) Immediate independence for all India
(D) Partition of Bengal
14. The address influenced:
(A) Congress policies immediately
(B) Jinnah’s strategy for Muslim League
(C) Rowlatt Act enforcement
(D) Simon Commission acceptance
15. Iqbal suggested Muslims should have:
(A) Complete political subordination to Hindus
(B) British-controlled legislature only
(C) Integration under Congress rule
(D) Representation and autonomy in Muslim-majority areas
16. Which concept was central to the Allahabad Address?
(A) Hindu-Muslim unity
(B) Armed rebellion
(C) Muslim nationalism
(D) Economic reforms
17. Iqbal emphasized that political future of Muslims depended on:
(A) British support only
(B) Hindu consent
(C) Self-determination and separate identity
(D) Joint electorates under Congress
18. The address argued that Muslims in India were not just a minority but:
(A) A regional group
(B) A separate nation
(C) A religious sect with no political rights
(D) British subjects without identity
19. Iqbal advocated that Muslims should be politically united:
(A) Only in Bengal
(B) Across India
(C) Only in Madras and Bombay
(D) Nowhere, they should remain local
20. Allahabad Address stressed the need for:
(A) Armed struggle
(B) Joining Congress leadership
(C) Political safeguards for Muslims
(D) British direct control
21. Which Muslim-majority provinces were identified as basis for future state?
(A) Bengal and Bihar
(B) Madras and Bombay
(C) Punjab, Sindh, NWFP, Balochistan
(D) Orissa and Assam
22. Allama Iqbal’s address is historically important because:
(A) It provided ideological groundwork for Pakistan
(B) It led to immediate partition
(C) It merged Congress and Muslim League
(D) It started the Non-Cooperation Movement
23. The Allahabad Address was delivered in the context of:
(A) World War I aftermath
(B) British economic crisis
(C) Hindu-Muslim political conflicts
(D) Bengal famine
24. Iqbal’s vision included the principle of:
(A) Complete integration with Hindus
(B) Acceptance of British monarchy indefinitely
(C) Muslim-majority self-governance
(D) Abolishment of provincial autonomy
25. Iqbal urged Muslims to focus on:
(A) Military conquest
(B) Cultural and political identity
(C) Complete assimilation with Hindus
(D) Economic reforms alone
26. The Allahabad Address is considered a milestone for:
(A) Civil Disobedience Movement
(B) Pakistan Movement
(C) Khilafat Movement
(D) Quit India Movement
27. Iqbal envisioned a Muslim state in:
(A) Eastern India only
(B) Western and northwestern India
(C) Entire subcontinent
(D) Only Sindh
28. Allahabad Address emphasized that Muslim unity was essential to:
(A) Preserve British rule
(B) Join Congress leadership
(C) Protect political and cultural interests
(D) Promote secularism only
29. The speech encouraged Muslims to:
(A) Oppose Jinnah
(B) Fully integrate with Hindus
(C) Seek separate electorates
(D) Ignore politics
30. Overall, the Allahabad Address is remembered as:
(A) A call for armed struggle
(B) A reconciliation speech for Congress and Muslim League
(C) A vision for a separate Muslim homeland
(D) British-endorsed proposal