According to tradition, the family of the Maharaja were the gonds.The family decent is from ruling family of a Raksel Raja of Palamau. The state became a British protectorate in 1818 after the Third Anglo-Maratha War. Neighbouring Udaipur State was founded in 1818 as an offshoot of Surguja State. In 1860 The State was conferred to younger son of Maharaja Amar Singh Deo, to Raja Bahadur Bindeshwari Prasad Singh Deo CSI. The Chief resided at Partabpur, the headquarters of a tract which he held as a maintenance grant in Surguja, and was a ruler of considerable ability and force of character. In 1871 he aided in the suppression of a rebellion in the Keonjhar State, for which he received the thanks of Government, and gifts of an elephant with gold-embroidered trappings and a gold watch and chain. He obtained the title of Raja Bahadur as a personal distinction, and was also made a Companion of the Most Exalted Order of the Star of India. In 1820 hereditary title of Maharaja was conferred on ruling chief of Surguja. Surguja was one of the Chota Nagpur States[3] and its rulers were Rajputs of the Raksel dynasty. They were the de facto overlords of the smaller states of Udaipur, Jashpur, Koriya (Korea) and Changbhakar that were fringing its territory.[4]
Maharaja Ramanuj Saran Singh Deo, the last ruler of this princely state signed the accession to the Indian Union on 1 January 1948.[6] The Maharaja has the notorious record of having shot and killed a total of 1710 Bengal tigers, the highest known individual score;[7][8] he doesn't hold the official record of shooting into extinction 3 of the last physically recorded Asiatic cheetahs in India, effectively making the species almost locally extinct in 1947, considering that a female was spotted in what was to be the District of Korea in 1951. The last three Asiatic Cheetas were shot by Maharaja Ramanuj Partap Singh Deo of Korea.[9][2]
Rulers
The rulers of Surguja State bore the title of 'Maharaja', although a few had the title of 'Maharaja Bahadoor', including the last head of the state.[10]
Rajas
1678 – 1709 Baiha Dadu Singh Deo
1709 – 1728 Balbhadra Singh I Deo
1728 – 1749 Jaswat Singh Deo
1749 – 1758 Bahadur Sigh Deo
1760 – 17.. Sheo Singh Deo
1792 – 1799 Ajit Singh Deo
1799 – 1800 Balbhadra Singh II Deo (1st time)
1800 – 1813 Lal Singram Singh Deo
1813 – 1816 Balbhadra Singh II Deo (2nd time)
1816 – 1820 interregnum
1820 – 1851 Lal Amar Singh Deo (from 1820 with hereditary style Maharaja)
1851 – 25 March 1879 Indrajit Singh Deo (b. 1827 – d. 1879)
25 Mar 1879 – 31 December 1917 Raghunath Saran Singh Deo (b. 1860 – d. 1917) (from 1887 with personal style Maharaja; from 1896 Maharaja Bahadur)
31 Dec 1917 – 1918 Ramanuj Saran Singh Deo (b. 1895 – d. 1965) (with hereditary style Maharaja)
Maharaja
1820–1851 : Lal Amar Singh Deo (from 1820 with hereditary style Maharaja)
1851–25 March 1879 : Indrajit Singh Deo (b. 1827 – d. 1879) (Maharaja Bahadur)
25 Mar 1879–31 December 1917 : Raghunath Saran Singh Deo (b. 1860 – d. 1917) (from 1887 with personal style Maharaja; from 1896 Maharaja Bahadur)
1917–15 August 1947 : Ramanuj Saran Singh Deo (Maharaja Bahadur)
1947–2001 : Madneshwar Saran Singh Deo (Titular Maharaja)