Static GK Notes – Topic-Wise Study Material
Hand-picked updates, explainers, and notifications for Static GK aspirants.

Indian Art & Culture
A complete guide on Indian Art & Culture covering architecture, dance, music, literature, paintings, UNESCO sites, cultural heritage, and important topics for competitive exams.
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Introduction
JobsMe's Static GK posts are comprehensive, exam-mapped topic guides built for aspirants who want more than a bare list of facts. Each post covers one Static GK topic in full - with structured tables, previous year question (PYQ) analysis, category-wise organisation, and topic-specific memory tricks that help you learn faster and retain longer. After reading any post, test yourself with the corresponding interactive quiz from the Static GK quiz archive, and if you are logged in, track how your score improves with every attempt.
Looking for current events to complement your static preparation? Visit daily current affairs or catch up with monthly current affairs.
What Makes JobsMe Static GK Posts Different
Every Static GK topic on the internet has been covered by dozens of platforms. What sets JobsMe apart is how each topic is presented - built specifically for exam performance, not just information.
Exam-Pattern Framing, Not Just Facts
Every post opens with a statement of how questions from that topic are typically asked in competitive exams - whether as one-liners, match-the-following, multi-statement correct/incorrect, or identification-based MCQs. This framing means you read the content with the right exam lens from the very first paragraph. You are not just learning facts; you are learning how those facts get tested.
Previous Year Question (PYQ) Analysis
Each post includes a section on how that topic has been asked in previous papers - specific questions from UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, IBPS PO, RRB NTPC, and other exams. This shows you which sub-topics within each Static GK category are tested most frequently and should receive the most preparation time.
Memory Tricks Built Into Every Topic
Memorising hundreds of Static GK facts is genuinely difficult without good mnemonic strategies. JobsMe posts include custom-built memory tricks for every topic - acronyms for grouping related items, visual association techniques for facts that are hard to distinguish, chronological patterns for historical events, and rhyme-based recall for numerical facts. These are not generic tips; they are written specifically for the facts in that post.
Structured Tables and Quick Revision Charts
Every post includes at least one structured table or quick-revision chart - such as a country-capital-currency table, a dynasty timeline, a battles-date-outcome matrix, or an organisation-headquarters grid. These tables are designed to be saved, printed, or screenshotted for last-minute revision. They contain everything you need to answer exam questions on that topic without any additional reading.
Topic-Wise Coverage - What's Available
Below is a guide to the key Static GK topics covered or planned in JobsMe's post archive. Each topic links to its dedicated post.
Indian History Topics
- Founders and Rulers of Indian Dynasties (Ancient to Medieval)
- Important Battles in Indian History (Ancient, Medieval, Colonial)
- The Indian National Movement - Key Events and Personalities
- Mughal Empire - Rulers, Contributions, Administration
- Colonial India - British East India Company to Independence
World and Indian Geography Topics
- Countries, Capitals and Currencies of the World
- Superlatives of India and the World (Largest, Longest, Highest, Smallest)
- Indian Cities and Their Nicknames
- Important Rivers of India - Origins, Tributaries, Dams
- National Parks, Wildlife Sanctuaries, and Biosphere Reserves of India
- Important Mountain Passes and Peaks of India and the World
International Organisations and Institutions
- International Organisations and Their Headquarters
- United Nations and Its Principal Organs
- Specialised Agencies of the UN (WHO, UNESCO, ILO, UNICEF, FAO)
- Financial Institutions - IMF, World Bank, ADB, NDB
- Regional Organisations - SAARC, ASEAN, SCO, BRICS, G20, G7, QUAD
Indian Polity and Constitution
- Fundamental Rights (Articles 12–35)
- Directive Principles of State Policy (Articles 36–51)
- Important Constitutional Articles at a Glance
- Important Constitutional Amendments (42nd, 44th, 73rd, 74th, 86th, 101st)
- Constitutional Bodies - Election Commission, CAG, UPSC, Finance Commission
- National Symbols of India - Animal, Bird, Flower, Fruit, Tree, Emblem, Song
Economy and Banking Topics
- Important RBI Rates and Their Definitions
- Headquarters of Indian and International Banks
- Important Economic Concepts - GDP, GNP, Inflation Types, Fiscal Deficit
- Five-Year Plans and NITI Aayog
- Stock Exchanges - NSE, BSE, Global Exchanges
Science and Technology Topics
- Important Inventions and Their Inventors
- Diseases, Deficiencies, and their Causal Organisms
- ISRO Missions - Satellites, Launch Vehicles, Space Probes
- Human Body - Important Glands, Organs, and Functions
- Important Scientific Principles and Laws
Culture, Awards, and Miscellaneous
- Padma Awards - Complete List of Bharat Ratna, Padma Vibhushan, Padma Bhushan, Padma Shri
- Nobel Prize - Subject, First Indian Winner, Recent Winners
- Sahitya Akademi and Jnanpith Award Winners
- Classical Dance Forms of India and Their States of Origin
- Books and Authors - Famous Indian and World Literature
- Stadiums, Sports Trophies, and Tournament Names
- Important Committees and Commissions - and Their Purpose
How to Read Static GK Posts for Maximum Retention
Step 1 - Read with a Question in Mind
Before opening any Static GK post, ask yourself: "How would an examiner turn this into a question?" For a post on Countries-Capitals-Currencies, the examiner might ask the capital of a lesser-known country, or the currency used by a country that shares a currency name with another. Reading with this question lens focuses your attention on the most testable facts.
Step 2 - Focus on Tables and Charts First
In a long Static GK post, the table or quick-revision chart at the end contains the exam-critical facts in their densest form. Read the table first to understand the scope of what needs to be memorised, then read the narrative text to understand the context and patterns. This sequence is faster and more efficient than reading top-to-bottom.
Step 3 - Apply the Memory Tricks
Do not skip the memory tricks section. The 2–3 minutes spent encoding a mnemonic for a group of facts will save you from blanking on those facts under exam pressure. Memory tricks are most effective when you create a mental image or association actively - do not just read the trick, actually visualise it.
Step 4 - Attempt the Quiz Immediately
Within 30 minutes of finishing the post, go to the quiz archive and attempt the corresponding quiz. This immediate testing is far more effective for retention than reviewing the post again. Focus especially on the explanation for any question you got wrong.
Step 5 - Re-Attempt After Spaced Intervals
Return to the quiz 3–5 days later and attempt it again without reviewing the post. This is spaced repetition - proven by decades of memory research to be the most effective long-term retention strategy. If you are logged in, your history will show you exactly which attempts had which scores, so you can see the improvement directly.





