Šurjan (Romania-Suranj) is a settlement in Serbia in the municipality of Secanj in the Central Banat Administrative District. According to the 2011 census there were 253 inhabitants. Shurjan is a border town on the border with Romania.

The village of Šurjan, near Jaša Tomić, is 2 km away from the Romanian border. For the first time the name Šerijen (Serjen) was mentioned in 1470. it was named after the name of the ruler Šerjena. In 1717 it was named after the town of Šurjan, and since the inhabitants left the place in Šurjan only 32 houses remained. In the first half of the fifteenth century the Serbian population moved and in 1783 they settled in the villages of the Military border Samos, Shurjan and Boka. They moved from the border village of Cavos on the Romanian side. So it was then increased to 69 houses. In the 18th century, the church was erected and 484 Orthodox and 20 Catholic inhabitants lived in the village. After the release of the railway line Sečanj-Pardanj (1889), Šurjan received a railroad station, and in 1902, School was build.