Ioryi Mucitano

Mucitano was involved in the death of the prominent Greek military officer Tellos Agras and his ally Antonis Mingas [bg; el].

[3] Mucitano fought during the 1903 Ilinden–Preobrazhenie Uprising in the Ottoman Balkans, being part of the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO) band of Gyorche Petrov.

[7] Although Mucitano gained the nickname of Kasapcheto (Касапчето; "Butcher"), he preferred to solve problems diplomatically, and his band generally applied relatively pacific measures despite being constantly pursued by ethnic Greek antartes fighters.

[8] A notable exception would be the murder of the prominent Greek military officer Tellos Agras and his pro-Greek Bulgarian companion Antonis Mingas [bg; el].

After the capture of both, and with strong opposition from the Aromanians' Bulgarian allies led by Ivan Zlatanov (better known as "Zlatan"), Agras and Mingas were hanged on 7 June 1907 in an area between the villages of Techovo and Vladovon [el].

[13] Costa Dabija, who had joined Mucitano during the formation of his band in Sofia, said about him that he was interested in poetry, having written a collection of poems which he read to his comrades in their spare time.

[4] Today, Mucitano is included under the name of "Georgi Kasapcheto" at the Monument to Todor Aleksandrov [bg; mk] in Kyustendil, Bulgaria, which honors the revolutionaries who fought in Macedonia.

Mucitano with another Aromanian band leader, Alexandru Coshca, and their subordinates
The bodies of Mucitano (left), Apostol Petkov (center) and Vasil Pufkata (right)