By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Explain how beliefs and practices make places sacred
  • 2Identify ways to conserve and restore sacred sites
  • 3Trace links between routes, rivers, mountains, and pilgrimage
  • 4Present a local sacred site with location and significance
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Why this chapter matters
How the Land Becomes Sacred builds Class 7 Social Studies understanding of sacred geography, tirthas, traditions, conservation. It connects NCERT concepts with daily life, map skills, democratic citizenship, and India's social, economic, cultural, and environmental context.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

How the Land Becomes Sacred - Class 7 Social Studies (CBSE)

Current 2026 sequence: NCERT Exploring Society: India and Beyond, Part I. This page follows the same tuition.in chapter structure as the Class 9 Social Studies pages: story first, concepts next, then revision and practice.

1. Chapter Snapshot

  • Book: Exploring Society: India and Beyond, Part I
  • Subject: Social Studies / Social Science
  • Domain focus: Culture
  • Core themes: sacred geography, tirthas, traditions, conservation
  • Exam use: short answers, map/activity questions, source-based questions, and competency-based reasoning.

2. Big Ideas

Sacred place

A place becomes sacred through stories, memories, worship, journeys, festivals, and community practices.

Tirtha

A tirtha is a place of crossing or pilgrimage where geography, faith, and culture meet.

Conservation

Sacred sites need care so that heritage, ecology, and public access are protected.

3. What You Should Be Able To Do

  • Explain how beliefs and practices make places sacred.
  • Identify ways to conserve and restore sacred sites.
  • Trace links between routes, rivers, mountains, and pilgrimage.
  • Present a local sacred site with location and significance.

4. Map and Activity Focus

  • Overlay trade-route and sacred-site maps.
  • Collect information on a local sacred place.
  • Discuss how visitors can protect heritage sites.

5. How To Write Better Answers

  1. Start with a clear definition or context sentence.
  2. Add two or three precise points from the chapter.
  3. Use an example from India, your locality, a map, or a classroom activity.
  4. End with the wider importance: citizenship, environment, economy, culture, or democratic life.

6. Quick Recap

  • Sacred place: learn the definition, one example, and why it matters.
  • Tirtha: learn the definition, one example, and why it matters.
  • Conservation: learn the definition, one example, and why it matters.

7. Practice Prompts

  • Give a one-line definition of the most important concept in this chapter.
  • Explain one cause-and-effect relationship from the chapter.
  • Give one real-life example from India or your neighbourhood.
  • If a map is involved, locate the relevant place or feature and explain why it matters.

8. Teacher Note

This chapter works best when students combine reading with map work, short local observations, and discussion. Ask students to connect the textbook idea to a familiar place, service, market, crop, weather event, institution, or community practice.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Sacred place
A place becomes sacred through stories, memories, worship, journeys, festivals, and community practices.
Write this as a concept frame: meaning + example + significance.
Tirtha
A tirtha is a place of crossing or pilgrimage where geography, faith, and culture meet.
Write this as a concept frame: meaning + example + significance.
Conservation
Sacred sites need care so that heritage, ecology, and public access are protected.
Write this as a concept frame: meaning + example + significance.
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Memorising how the land becomes sacred without examples
Add one Indian, local, historical, map-based, or classroom-activity example to every answer.
WATCH OUT
Writing only facts and no explanation
Use cause -> effect language: because, therefore, as a result, this matters because.
WATCH OUT
Ignoring map or activity work
For Class 7 Social Studies, map labels, surveys, flowcharts, timelines, and posters often carry assessment value.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Define
What is the main idea of How the Land Becomes Sacred?
Show solution
The main idea is to understand sacred place and connect it with sacred geography, tirthas, traditions, conservation. A good answer gives the meaning, one example, and why it matters in Indian society.
Q2MEDIUM· Explain
Explain any two learning outcomes from How the Land Becomes Sacred.
Show solution
Choose two outcomes: Explain how beliefs and practices make places sacred; Identify ways to conserve and restore sacred sites. For each one, write the concept, add an example, and explain its importance in one sentence.
Q3MEDIUM· Activity
Suggest one classroom or map activity for How the Land Becomes Sacred and explain what it teaches.
Show solution
One useful activity is: Overlay trade-route and sacred-site maps. It teaches students to move from memorising facts to observing evidence, organising information, and explaining social science ideas clearly.
Q4HARD· Competency
How does How the Land Becomes Sacred connect textbook learning with real life?
Show solution
It connects real life through sacred geography, tirthas, traditions, conservation. A strong 5-mark answer should define the topic, explain two textbook ideas, give one Indian/local example, and end with why the chapter matters for responsible citizenship or informed decision-making.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • How the Land Becomes Sacred belongs to Part I of Exploring Society: India and Beyond.
  • Domain focus: Culture.
  • Key themes: sacred geography, tirthas, traditions, conservation.
  • Outcome: Explain how beliefs and practices make places sacred.
  • Outcome: Identify ways to conserve and restore sacred sites.
  • Outcome: Trace links between routes, rivers, mountains, and pilgrimage.
  • Outcome: Present a local sacred site with location and significance.
  • Activity focus: Overlay trade-route and sacred-site maps.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 4-6 marks, depending on school paper design

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Very Short11-2Definitions and key terms
Short Answer2-31Explanation with examples
Map / Activity / Case3-50-1Application and competency-based reasoning
Prep strategy
  • Learn every key term with one example
  • Practise one map, flowchart, timeline, survey, or poster task
  • Write answers in definition + explanation + example format
  • Revise learning outcomes because questions often follow them closely

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Overlay trade-route and sacred-site maps

Turns the chapter into observation, mapping, comparison, or civic/economic reasoning.

Collect information on a local sacred place

Turns the chapter into observation, mapping, comparison, or civic/economic reasoning.

Discuss how visitors can protect heritage sites

Turns the chapter into observation, mapping, comparison, or civic/economic reasoning.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Underline the command word: define, explain, compare, locate, analyse, evaluate, or suggest
  2. Use one example in every answer
  3. For map work, write both the label and the significance
  4. For activity answers, mention what the activity helps students understand

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Compare How the Land Becomes Sacred with a similar topic from another country or historical period.
  • Use one extra data point, map, source, or newspaper example to enrich a long answer.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 7 School ExamHigh
Middle School Social Studies OlympiadMedium
UPSC / Civil Services foundation readingLow now, useful as foundation

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Yes. It is included in the 2026 Class 7 Social Science sequence for Exploring Society: India and Beyond (Part I).

Revise the key terms, one map/activity task, two textbook examples, and one short answer using definition + explanation + example.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 20 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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