Georgi Kitov (Bulgarian: Георги Китов) (March 1, 1943 – September 14, 2008) was a Bulgarian archaeologist and thracologist. He specialized in Thrace archaeology. He participated in the excavations of many sites including the Alexandrovo Tomb, Kosmatka, Svetitzata and Starosel Cult Complex.
Kitov died from a heart attack on September 14, 2008 during excavations in Starosel, Bulgaria.
Instead of the more usual archaeological methods, Kitov used three large earthmoving machines. He claimed that he had to work quickly to deter looters. On October 4 Kitov and his team found a large marble door. Later that night they entered a chamber with a sarcophagus and a large number of golden objects.
According to Kitov's account, he informed the police in Kazanluk to ask for help of a couple of police officers to help transport the treasure to his headquarters in a local hotel. Police sent 50 men and a local prosecutor, who were suspicious because the team intended to move the artifacts in the middle of the night.
Police officers frisked everyone when they came from the tomb in case they were trying to smuggle out valuables. When the police demanded that the treasure be taken to the local police station, Kitov refused. Both groups spent the whole night outside the mound until the police escorted the team and the artifacts to their hotel the next morning. Apparent police overkill caused lots of public amusement.
In February 2001, the National Archaeological Institute and Museum censure him for excavating sites without permission and took away his authorization to lead expeditions for a year. TimesOnline,"His defences did not entirely convince his critics and in 2001 the National Archaeological Institute and Museum in Sofia withdrew for one year his licence to dig. It also expelled Kitov from his post as head of the Institute’s Thracian section; added to his professional misdemeanours was that he had called the chairperson of the committee which had investigated him “a moron”. " Georgi Kitov, Who Excavated Thrace, Dies at 65, The New York Times,"The journal reported that in 2001 a 13-member field studies committee at the National Archaeological Institute and Museum in Sofia unanimously denied him permission to lead expeditions for a year. Later that year, the committee expelled Mr. Kitov as head of the institute’s Thracian section, partly for acting like a “spoiled child” and calling the chairwoman “a moron,” the panel said, according to the journal." Later the same year, they expelled Kitov from his post as a Thracian section.
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