This MCQ module is based on: India’s Agricultural Landscape
India’s Agricultural Landscape
India's Agricultural Landscape
Exploring Society: India and Beyond Part-II | The Story of Indian Farming
India's Agricultural Landscape
Agriculture? is among the oldest occupations of humankind. It broadly includes the preparation of land, growing of crops, rearing of animals, and in many cases, the cultivation of trees as part of an integrated farming system. In some regions, farmers also engage in pisciculture? (rearing fish) or rear cocoons to produce silk thread. The term agriculture, derived from the Latin words agri (field) and culture (to cultivate), encompasses farming, animal husbandry?, forestry, and horticulture?.
A little over 18 per cent of India's total value of goods and services (Gross Domestic Product) comes from agriculture and allied activities (2022-23). Around 46 per cent of the country's working population depends on agriculture for its livelihood. Many Indian families have been closely connected to the land for generations, and farming remains essential for feeding and sustaining the population.
When we hear the word 'farmer', many of us picture a man. However, in rural India, more than 75 per cent of agricultural workers are women (2025). They perform a majority of farming tasks, from sowing seeds to harvesting and threshing? the grain.
Reflect: Why do you think the image of a 'farmer' is often male despite women doing most of the work? What does this tell us about how society views different types of labour?
India's farming landscape is a rich mixture of traditional and modern practices, with a wide variety of crops and deep-rooted cultural traditions. From the golden wheat fields of Punjab and the saffron valley of Kashmir to the lush tea gardens of the Northeast and the emerald paddy fields of Kerala, agriculture has been a foundational part of India's identity for millennia.
While only about 18% of GDP comes from agriculture, nearly half of India's workers depend on it. This gap between economic contribution and employment share is a key feature of the Indian economy.
Make a list of the foods you typically eat in a day. Sort them into grains, pulses, oils, vegetables, and fruits. Now locate your home on a physical map of India.
- Which of these food items do you think are grown near your home?
- What factors (soil, climate, water) make your region suitable for those crops?
- Which items come from far away? Why are they not grown locally?
Echoes from the Past — The History of Indian Farming
The story of Indian farming stretches back to prehistoric times. Archaeological excavations have revealed traces of rice grains in the Ganga Plain dating as far back as the 7th or 8th millennium BCE. At Mehrgarh? (in Baluchistan, a site that preceded the Sindhu-Sarasvati civilisation), the cultivation of barley and millets has been dated to the 7th millennium BCE. Barley and wheat later became the staple crops of the Harappans?, with evidence of rice appearing by the 3rd millennium BCE.
Timeline: The Evolution of Indian Farming
Earliest Cultivation
Rice grains found in the Ganga Plain. Barley and millets cultivated at Mehrgarh in Baluchistan.Domestication of Animals
Cattle, sheep, goats, dogs, pigs, and poultry domesticated during the pre-urban phase of the Sindhu-Sarasvati civilisation.Intercropping at Kalibangan
Evidence of intercropping? found at the Harappan site of Kalibangan (Rajasthan) — perpendicular furrows indicate two crops grown simultaneously.Harappan Agriculture Expands
Wheat, barley, rice, millets, oilseeds (sesame, mustard), legumes, fibre crops (cotton, jute), fruits (grapes, mango, jackfruit), and many vegetables cultivated.Knowledge in Ancient Texts
Texts like the Arthasastra, Sangam literature, Amarakosha, Krishiparasara, Brihatsamhita, and Vriksayurveda document agricultural practices, horticulture, and biodiversity.Over time, farmers expanded their cultivation to include oilseeds (sesame, safflower, linseed, mustard, castor), legumes (green gram, black gram, fenugreek), fibre crops (cotton, hemp, jute), and a variety of fruits including grapes, dates, jujube, jackfruit, mango, mulberry, and black plum.
The Vedas mention yava (barley), godhuma (wheat), and vrihi (rice), along with sesame, black gram, and various types of pulses and legumes. This shows that a diverse agricultural system existed even in Vedic times.
Ancient Agricultural Texts and Their Wisdom
In the historical period, several ancient Indian texts provide invaluable knowledge about farming. These texts cover everything from soil preparation and seed treatment to irrigation methods and plant care.
From the types of plants, animals, soils, and climates to methods of watering crops, these ancient texts reveal the remarkable depth of knowledge our ancestors had about farming. The practice of intercropping found at the Harappan site of Kalibangan around 2800 BCE was still being followed in the same region nearly 4,800 years later in the 1960s!
Competency-Based Questions
1. FALSE — Agriculture contributes about 18% of GDP; it is 46% of the working population that depends on farming.
2. TRUE — Archaeological investigations confirm rice grains in the Ganga Plain from that period.
3. FALSE — Intercropping is growing two or more crops simultaneously in the same field. The technique described is terrace farming.
4. TRUE — The Brihatsamhita by Varahamihira describes grafting techniques still in practice.
Answers: 1→(b), 2→(d), 3→(a), 4→(c), 5→(e)