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

  • 1Trace the origins of print in East Asia and Europe
  • 2Explain Gutenberg's press and the print revolution
  • 3Analyse the link between print and the French Revolution
  • 4Describe the coming of print to India and its social impact
  • 5Explain print's role in reform, women's writing, nationalism and censorship
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Why this chapter matters
A culture-and-politics history chapter with reliable short answers (Gutenberg, Vernacular Press Act) and a long-answer linking print to the French Revolution or Indian nationalism.

Print Culture and the Modern World — RBSE Class 10 (History)

Before print, a book had to be copied by hand — slow, costly, and rare. Then a machine could make hundreds of identical copies cheaply, and ideas spread faster than any ruler could control. Print did not just record history; it made it — feeding the Reformation, the French Revolution, and India's freedom movement. This chapter is the story of that quiet revolution.


1. The first printed books — East Asia

The earliest kind of print technology was hand printing in China, Japan and Korea. From the 6th century, Chinese "woodblock" printing produced books, and China was the major producer for centuries (used for civil-service exam texts). Japan's Buddhist Diamond Sutra (868 CE) is the oldest dated printed book. Print later spread with paper along the Silk Route to Europe.


2. Gutenberg and the print revolution in Europe

Around 1448, Johann Gutenberg in Germany developed the first printing press using movable metal type; his first major printed book was the Bible. This began the print revolution:

  • Books became cheaper and were produced in large numbers — a new reading public emerged.
  • A "reading mania" spread; ballads, folk tales, almanacs and later newspapers reached ordinary people.
  • Print encouraged debate and dissent. Martin Luther's writings sparked the Protestant Reformation; the Roman Church, alarmed, began an Index of Prohibited Books.

Print and the French Revolution: print spread Enlightenment ideas (Voltaire, Rousseau), criticised authority and the monarchy, and created a culture of debate — helping (though not single-handedly causing) the Revolution.


3. Print comes to India

India had a rich manuscript tradition (hand-written, expensive, fragile). Print arrived with Portuguese missionaries in Goa (mid-16th century). By the late 18th century, newspapers appeared — James Augustus Hickey's Bengal Gazette (1780) was the first.

Print and reform/religion: vernacular print fuelled intense debates on social reform — Raja Rammohun Roy's Sambad Kaumudi, and conservative replies; debates on widow immolation, widow remarriage, and religion reached wide audiences. Religious texts (Ramcharitmanas, Islamic tracts) became cheaply available.

Print, women and the poor: reading among women grew (though often opposed); writers like Kailashbashini Debi and Rashsundari Debi (her autobiography Amar Jiban) wrote of women's lives. Cheap books and public libraries reached poorer readers; some like Jyotiba Phule wrote on caste injustice.


4. Print and nationalism — and censorship

As nationalism grew, print carried anti-colonial ideas. Alarmed, the British passed the Vernacular Press Act (1878), giving the government power to censor and shut down "seditious" Indian-language newspapers. Yet nationalist papers persisted; when Balgangadhar Tilak was tried, protests spread through the press. Print had become a weapon of the freedom struggle.


5. Closing thought

Print transformed the world: it democratised knowledge, enabled the Reformation and Revolution, and in India powered reform, religious debate, women's writing and nationalism — provoking censorship in response. Track the journey from woodblock to Gutenberg to the Indian vernacular press, and the print–power tension. In the RBSE board this chapter reliably gives short-answer and a long-answer (print & French Revolution, or print & Indian nationalism) worth 5–7 marks.

Key formulas & results

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

Woodblock print
hand printing in China/Japan/Korea
Earliest print technology.
Diamond Sutra
868 CE, Japan — oldest dated printed book
Buddhist text.
Gutenberg press
c.1448, movable metal type; first book the Bible
Began Europe's print revolution.
First Indian newspaper
Bengal Gazette, 1780 (James A. Hickey)
Early Indian print journalism.
Vernacular Press Act
1878 — censorship of Indian-language press
British response to nationalist print.
Amar Jiban
Rashsundari Debi's autobiography
Early women's writing in print.
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Common mistakes & fixes

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

WATCH OUT
Crediting Gutenberg with inventing all print
Hand/woodblock printing existed earlier in East Asia; Gutenberg invented the movable-type PRESS in Europe (c.1448).
WATCH OUT
Saying print alone caused the French Revolution
Print spread ideas and debate, contributing to it, but did not single-handedly cause the Revolution.
WATCH OUT
Ignoring print's role in Indian reform
Vernacular print drove debates on sati, widow remarriage, caste and religion — a major social impact.
WATCH OUT
Forgetting censorship
The Vernacular Press Act (1878) let the British censor and shut nationalist papers.
WATCH OUT
Overlooking women and the poor
Print widened reading among women and poorer readers, producing new voices (Rashsundari Debi, Jyotiba Phule).

NCERT exercises (with solutions)

Every NCERT exercise from this chapter — what it covers and how many questions to expect.

Practice problems

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

Q1EASY· Fact
Who developed the first printing press in Europe and around when?
Show solution
Johann Gutenberg, around 1448. ✦ Answer: Gutenberg, c.1448.
Q2EASY· Fact
Name the first newspaper published in India.
Show solution
The Bengal Gazette (1780), by James Augustus Hickey. ✦ Answer: Bengal Gazette (1780).
Q3EASY· Term
What was the Vernacular Press Act?
Show solution
An 1878 law giving the British government power to censor and suppress Indian-language newspapers. ✦ Answer: an 1878 censorship law on the Indian-language press.
Q4MEDIUM· Impact
What was the 'reading mania' in Europe?
Show solution
Step 1 — Cheap, plentiful printed books created a large new reading public. Step 2 — People eagerly read ballads, tales, almanacs and newspapers. ✦ Answer: a surge in reading among the wider public thanks to cheap print.
Q5MEDIUM· Reformation
How did print help the Protestant Reformation?
Show solution
Step 1 — Martin Luther's writings were printed and spread rapidly and widely. Step 2 — This fuelled debate and dissent against the Church, which responded with an Index of Prohibited Books. ✦ Answer: it spread Luther's ideas quickly, enabling religious dissent.
Q6MEDIUM· India reform
How did print encourage social reform debates in India?
Show solution
Step 1 — Vernacular newspapers and pamphlets carried arguments on sati, widow remarriage and caste. Step 2 — Reformers (e.g. Rammohun Roy) and their opponents debated publicly in print. ✦ Answer: it opened public debate on social issues to a wide audience.
Q7HARD· Analysis
Explain how print culture contributed to the French Revolution.
Show solution
Step 1 — Print spread Enlightenment ideas (Rousseau, Voltaire) questioning tradition and authority. Step 2 — It created a culture of debate and criticism of the monarchy. Step 3 — Cartoons and writings mocked the ruling order, shaping public opinion. ✦ Answer: it spread critical ideas and built a debating public that questioned the old order.
Q8HARD· Nationalism
How did the British respond to nationalist print, and what was the effect?
Show solution
Step 1 — They passed the Vernacular Press Act (1878) to censor and shut Indian-language papers. Step 2 — When leaders like Tilak were tried, the press spread protest. Step 3 — Print continued to carry nationalist ideas despite censorship. ✦ Answer: censorship laws were imposed, but nationalist print persisted and spread protest.
Q9MEDIUM· Women
How did print affect women's lives in India?
Show solution
Step 1 — Reading among women grew, though sometimes opposed by conservatives. Step 2 — Women authors (e.g. Rashsundari Debi's Amar Jiban) wrote about their lives. ✦ Answer: it expanded women's reading and gave them a voice in print.

5-minute revision

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

  • Earliest print: woodblock in China/Japan/Korea; Diamond Sutra 868 CE.
  • Gutenberg's press c.1448; first book the Bible; print revolution.
  • Reading mania; print aided the Reformation and French Revolution.
  • Print reached India via Portuguese missionaries; Bengal Gazette 1780.
  • Vernacular print drove reform debates (sati, caste, religion).
  • Print widened women's and poorer readers' access.
  • Vernacular Press Act 1878 censored nationalist papers.

Rajasthan (RBSE) marks blueprint

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

Typical chapter weightage: 5–6 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ / very short11–2Gutenberg, Bengal Gazette, Vernacular Press Act
Short answer21Reading mania, Reformation, reform debates
Long answer31Print & French Revolution or nationalism
Prep strategy
  • Trace print history: woodblock → Gutenberg → Indian press
  • Prepare the print–French Revolution long answer
  • Learn dates: 868, c.1448, 1780, 1878
  • Note print's role in reform, women's writing and nationalism

Where this shows up in the real world

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

Media literacy

Shows how mass communication shapes opinion and politics.

Freedom of the press

Explains the roots of censorship debates still relevant today.

Cultural history

Reveals how reading changed societies and empowered new groups.

Publishing

Traces the origins of newspapers, books and libraries.

Exam strategy

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

  1. Sequence the history of print with correct dates.
  2. Link print to specific outcomes (Reformation, Revolution, nationalism).
  3. Cite Indian examples (Bengal Gazette, Rammohun Roy, Rashsundari Debi).
  4. Explain censorship with the Vernacular Press Act.
  5. Keep East-Asian origins distinct from Gutenberg's press.

Going beyond the textbook

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

  • Manuscript vs print cultures and the 'printing press as an agent of change'.
  • Public sphere theory (Habermas).
  • Censorship regimes across empires.
  • The economics of early publishing.

Where else this chapter is tested

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

RBSE Class 10 Board (BSER Ajmer)High — print & revolution/nationalism questions every year
NTSE / state scholarshipMedium — history MCQs
UPSC/State PSC FoundationMedium — modern history and media
Social Science OlympiadMedium — cultural history

Questions students ask

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

Yes — RBSE (BSER, Ajmer) prescribes the NCERT Social Science textbooks, so History chapters match the national syllabus while RBSE sets its own exam pattern.

No — hand and woodblock printing existed earlier in East Asia. Gutenberg invented the movable-type printing press in Europe around 1448, which triggered the print revolution.

It spread Enlightenment ideas, encouraged debate and criticism of the monarchy, and shaped public opinion against the old order.

An 1878 British law that allowed the government to censor and suppress Indian-language newspapers spreading nationalist ideas.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 1 July 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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