The name 'Tigiria' likely originated in the SanskritTrigiri, meaning "Three Hills".[citation needed] Most of the inhabitants of Tigiria were Hindu, members of the Chasa caste, and important places of worship were located within the area of Tigiria State.
Tigiria was founded at an uncertain date in the sixteenth century by a ruler named Nityananda Tunga of the local Kshatriya Tunga clan of Central Odisha region. According to legends he was directed to the spot in a dream while on a pilgrimage to Puri.[3][4][1] In 1682, the Marathas granted the title of Mahapatra to Raja Sankarsen Tunga for his services. His successor Gopinath Chamupati Singh has authored the war treatise Virasarvasvam.[5]
The last Raja Brajraj Kshatriya Birbar Chamupati Singh Mahapatra signed the accession to the Indian Union on 1 January 1948[2] and was the final surviving royal of the British Raj-era princely states until he breathed his last in 2015.[6][7]
Rulers
The rulers of Tigiria state of the Tunga dynasty.[8]
Nityananda Tunga (1682-1682
Sankarsen Tunga (1682–1742)
Gopinath Chamupati Singh (1743–1767..)
Jadumani Rai Singh (..1767–1793)
Jagannath Chamupati Singh (1797–1844)
Harihar Kshatriya Birbar Chamupati Singh (1844–8 April 1886)
Banamali Kshatriya Birbar Chamupati Singh (8 April 1886 – 1933)