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The Cat in Ancient Egypt
Tour Egypt ^ | FR Posts 1-30-2003 (April 1st, 2001) | By Ilene Springer

Posted on 01/31/2003 2:29:42 PM PST by vannrox

The Cat in Ancient Egypt

By Ilene Springer

After the pyramids and the kohl painted eyes, almost nothing evokes more awe and mystery than the fascination ancient Egyptians had with cats.

They were not only the most popular pet in the house, but their status rose to that of the sacred animals and then on to the most esteemed deities like no other creature before them.

Cats domesticate the ancient Egyptians

Although no one can pinpoint the time exactly, we know that the cat was domesticated in Egypt, probably around 2000 B.C., and that most modern cats are descendants of the cats of ancient Egypt.  One reason it is difficult to say precisely when domestication occurred is that the ancient Egyptians did not distinguish between wild and tame cats in their descriptions of them. There was one word for cat-and that was miu or mii, meaning "he or she who mews."

So then how did domestication of the cat come about?  Dogs, associated with hunting, had actually been domesticated thousands of years before, according to archeologists.  But cats, being the aloof, aristocratic creatures they are admired for, apparently took their time in fully befriending the ancient Egyptians.


Modern Egyptian Wild Cat: The Sand Cat
Possibly one of the ancestors of the Modern Cat

There is a cat known as the African wild cat (Felis silvestris libyca)-one of the closest wild relatives of the modern cat.  It is larger than the average domesticated cat of today.  The feline's tawny, yellow-gray fur, long tapering tail and striped markings, affording it ideal camouflage among the rocks and sand of the desert.  This cat is known as a predator-a hunter of small game-rather than a scavenger.  The other cat native to Egypt is the swamp or jungle cat-(Felis chaus), but it is the wild cat which is believed to have been the cat to "domesticate the Egyptians."

In the villages, the greatest danger to Egyptian households were the

numerous poisonous snakes, rats and mice which attacked food supplies in the home and the village granaries.  The wild cat, it is assumed, strayed into the villages and hunted down the vermin, keeping them at bay.  It's easy to imagine the grateful Egyptians leaving out scraps of food to encourage the wild cats on their vigils.  A symbiotic relationship occurred between animal and human.  Next, the felines found their way into the Egyptian homes, spent some time there, allowed themselves to be tamed and raised their kittens in a human environment.  As soon as the Egyptians began supplying the cats with
food, thereby significantly changing their diet, and breeding them for certain characteristics, the cats were domesticated.   They were perfect pets-playful, intelligent, affectionate and helpful to the farmers who sustained life in ancient Egypt.

Tomb paintings with cats as part of family life began to show up during the New Kingdom-about 500 years after the first attempts at domestication.  But the most direct evidence for domestication comes from cemeteries of mummified cats.  These appear to be from around 1000 B.C. (the late Pharonic era).  And they were most likely domesticated cats from ordinary households or temple catteries; it wouldn't make sense to go to such trouble for wild animals who died.

 The lovable and helpful pet

During the New Kingdom (1540 to 1069 B.C.), there were many tomb scenes that started showing cats as part of everyday life.  The ancient Egyptians took their cats on hunting excursions, especially in the marshes where cats may have been trained to retrieve fowl and fish.  Another very common scene in tomb paintings was a cat seated under a woman's chair, showing that the cat had become an integral   part of the ancient Egyptian family life.


Modern Egyptian Mau

Many Egyptian parents named their children after cats, especially their daughters.  Some girls were called Mit or Miut.  The mummy of a five-year-old girl named Mirt was found at Deir el-Bahri in King Mentuhotep's temple.

Cats were also valued for their mysterious and superstitious qualities. There is a myth that the Egyptians once won a battle because of cats. They were fighting a foreign regiment and just at the time of attack by the foreigners, the Egyptian released thousands of cats at the front lines. Seeing the onslaught of these terrifying creatures, the foreign army retreated in panic.

Cats as sacred animals

"The progress of the cat in Egyptian religion was quite remarkable and in many respects unusual," writes Jaromir Malek, author of The Cat in Ancient Egypt.  "Unlike some other animals, the cat was not primarily associated with an important local deity at the beginning of Egyptian time.  It never attained a truly elected 'official' status which would have enabled it to become a full member of the divine community encountered on the walls of Egyptian temples.  But in spite of all this, the cat's popularity eventually surpassed that of any other animal and reached far beyond Egypt's boundaries."

The earliest feline cat goddess recorded was called Mafdet and is described in the Pyramid Texts as killing a serpent with her claws. But the most famous cat goddesses in the world, first revered by the ancient Egyptians were Bastet (also known as Bast, Pasch, Ubasti) and the lion-headed Sekhmet.

Bastet was often depicted as having the body of a woman and the head of a domestic cat.  She was associated with the Eye of Ra, acting within the sun god's power.  The Egyptians loved Bastet so much that she became a household goddess and protector of women, children and domestic cats.  She was also the goddess of sunrise, music, dance, pleasure, as well as family, fertility and birth.  

Her supposed evil counterpart was the goddess Sekhmet who represented the cat goddess' destructive force.  She is known as the goddess of war and pestilence.  But even she was tamed by Ra (who supposedly got her drunk) and she eventually became the powerful protector of humans.  Together, Bastet and Sekhmet represented the balance of the forces of nature.

Cats began to appear on objects of everyday life.  There were gold cats on intricate bracelets, small golden cat pendants, cats amulets made of soapstone for necklaces and rings.  Women made up their faces holding mirrors with cats on the wooden handles and on their cosmetic pots.  The best part was that ordinary people could enjoy the protection of the cat goddess through their amulets on their clothing or around their necks or in their earlobes. Cats even figured in dream interpretation.  In one book of ancient dreams, it was said that if a man sees a cat in a dream, it means he will have a good harvest.

In the late periods of Egyptian history, the popularity of the cat increased and a great many bronze cat statuettes were made; most were intended for shrines or funerary purposes.  Most had pierced ears and silver or gold earrings.  Their eyes were made of inlaid rock crystal or a similar opaque material.  The ancient Egyptians considered the female cat as a good mother, and there have been several statues of mother cats and kittens discovered.

Cats were held in such high esteem that at one point, the penalty for killing a cat-even accidentally-was death.

Feline festivities

Probably the greatest testimony to cats were the cults and celebrations the ancient Egyptians devoted to Bastet.  In northern Egypt, around 3200 B.C., the city Bubastis came into being.  This was the center of worship for the goddess Bastet, which simply means "she who comes from Bast."  Once a year around October 31, the festival of Bastet would occur with hundreds of thousands of people making pilgrimages to Bubastis and other ancient cities including Memphis.  There was singing and wine and wild behavior. And as the evening ended, there was also prayers to Bastet, accompanied by music and incense.

Bubastis was destroyed by the Persians in 350 B.C.  But her most famous residents live on-not only in the streets of Cairo and the villages of rural Egypt but all over the world.  Through the common domesticated cat, the ancient Egyptians achieved a most uncommon mission-immortality.

### Ilene Springer writes on ancient Egypt and archaeology and is a

student of museum studies at Harvard University.

Source:  The Cat in Ancient Egypt by Jaromir Malek  (British Museum

Press, 1993)


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: agriculture; animalhusbandry; archaeology; bas; cat; cats; desert; egypt; fur; ggg; god; godsgravesglyphs; history; past; paw; pyramid; worship
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To: AnAmericanMother
Considering the circumstances, I don't know much about Siamese cats. Sam showed up almost five years ago and is tiny but deceptively heavy and very active. Everybody loves her and she loves them. I've had a lot of cats and have four now and they're all amazing, but Sam is out of sight.
101 posted on 03/10/2003 8:20:33 PM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: AnAmericanMother
You nailed it, that's Sam. Momentarily I wondered how she could eat so much, then I saw her skid marks on the walls! She's a lot like a dog, too. She'll eat almost anything if she can get at it, and she loves to retrieve.
102 posted on 03/10/2003 8:28:08 PM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: AnAmericanMother
I searched the web and saw very few Siamese cats like her. I learned about apple heads and wedge heads, but found enough variations to get me good and confused.
103 posted on 03/10/2003 8:34:03 PM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: AnAmericanMother; sciencediet
Thanks for the info.

We have had plenty of tabbies, calicos, tuxedos, etc, but have never had Siamese, they are definitely a breed apart!

104 posted on 03/10/2003 8:55:13 PM PST by Rome2000
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To: sciencediet
That cat is not an extreme type Siamese - looks more British type than American. (Are you SURE he's not a boy?)

One thing a lot of American breeders have done is exaggerate the top line of the skull and the length of the muzzle (and the relative size of the ears) as well as the body thinness and length, until you have almost a caricature of a Siamese. (I think that's one of the reasons a lot of folks have gone heavily into the old "apple head" type Siamese, in reaction.) I don't like the old type, but I always bred what I called a moderate and not "extreme" type cat. I did have a nice British strain in my line, through Marge Naples's DiNapoli cattery up in the Northeast, so the cats all have a nice top line and good heads without being extreme. I probably could never have showed a cat to Grand, given the type I was breeding, but I did have a lovely Champion BP male (God rest his soul, he's sleeping under a rhododendron bush in our front yard.)

Another deceptive thing about the "extreme" type Siamese is that they tend to put on a little more weight at 4-5 years of age and settle down just a trifle. The ones you see are always the young show cats - most folks will start campaigning a fine quality cat in the Kitten classes at 7-9 months, then move up to the Championship rings as soon as allowed. If you keep a busy show schedule, the cat will make Champion within the first year and point out to Grand within the next year or so (assuming the cat has the quality to go Grand). By the time the cat is 2 or 3, he or she is retired to breeding, so you never see the older cats in the ring. My older cats look more like cats and less like monkeys!

105 posted on 03/11/2003 5:54:57 AM PST by AnAmericanMother (. . . we are Siamese, if you please. We are Siamese, if you don't please.)
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To: Luna
Oh my putty does the same thing.....and he's 18lbs.....
106 posted on 03/11/2003 5:56:59 AM PST by geege
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To: vannrox
... their status rose to that of the sacred animals and then on to the most esteemed (Egyptian) deities like no other creature before them.

Of course their decendents (we have two) have never forgotten this ... and remind us daily.

107 posted on 03/11/2003 6:04:31 AM PST by BluH2o
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To: AnAmericanMother
Thank you for the information! Where is diNapoli cattery? Sam is about 5 now and I still wonder where she came from. The animal control officer got her brother, someone turned him in, and he, not finding the owners, kept him.

I attended a cat show only once. That is a whole other world, isn't it?

108 posted on 03/11/2003 6:29:40 AM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: sciencediet
I'm showing my age. Marge Naples the last I knew lives outside of Boston IIRC. She may still be actively breeding and showing, but she wrote most of her books in the 60s and 70s (which coincidentally was when I was active on the show circuit). I met her in '78 or '9 at a show, and I corresponded with her for awhile, but I'm ashamed to say I have no idea where she is now. I note from the internet that she received a Cat Fanciers' Association Lifetime award in 1999 (which she richly deserved!)

My Champion BP Male was a great-grandchild of her lovely Gr. Ch. DiNapoli Serenade In Blue. She has forgotten more about Siamese than I ever knew, and she's written several delightful books. The books are a trifle dated now, especially the photos, but she knows her cats inside and out. I can highly recommend her "This Is the Siamese Cat" for lots of helpful info about 'measle idiosyncrasies.

109 posted on 03/11/2003 6:56:25 AM PST by AnAmericanMother (. . . we are Siamese if you please. We are Siamese if you don't please.)
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To: AnAmericanMother
I have to go out for a few hours. Bumping so I can get back to you.
110 posted on 03/11/2003 7:01:22 AM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: AnAmericanMother; sciencediet
AnAmericanMother, what's your cattery? Do you show CFA or TICA?

I agree "she" - Sam - certainly appears to have male enhancements, I thought she was a boy too, but, she looks for all the world like a Blue point, with albeit a lovely clear coat. You rarely see points that well matched and dark in a choccy. Could be the photo coloring deceiving me though.

I think her ears look nice and big, it is difficult to judge size in a profile pic but her profile looks straight as a die.

sciencediet, much as I'd like to know who bred her, I wouldn't suggest you go looking to hard, if I was the breeder I'd still be searching for that pretty cat. btw, is she a chocolate? or a blue?
111 posted on 03/11/2003 7:41:26 PM PST by HetLoo
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To: HetLoo; sciencediet
My cattery is Hy-Brasil, from before the "4 grands rule" so it may well still be on file with C.F.A. . . . but I haven't showed a cat since my kids were born back in the 80s. I showed almost all C.F.A. -- TICA was just getting started, and a good cat show friend of mine, Hatcher Granville of Rich-Hat Cattery (now sadly deceased - her very nice BP male, Tr. Ch. Sonnenhof's Apache of Barba, sired my Champion), was very big into TICA but I don't think we went to more than 2 or 3 TICA shows. Showed mostly in the SE - Atlanta area, as far west as B'ham and Montgomery, east to Greenville/S'burg, and as far north as Johnson City TN once for a big 8 ring All Breed show. (That was where my boy Hy-Brasil Cormac made his Championship, Walter Friend gave him his final winners ribbon. He was a BIG boy - twice the size of anything else in the ring but very correct in conformation. He did go BOX in one ring behind a very pretty Seal Point lady . . . bless their hearts, the judges didn't know what to do with a Siamese Moose!)

I thought about Blue Point for that little boy (I SWEAR it's a boy!) but the points on the legs are low for a BP, and with every BP I've ever had the mask joined the ear points by the time they were 8 months old, and he looks older than that from his shoulder and hip development. The body color also looks too light for a BP. So I would say this is a Choc with Grand potential . . .

sciencediet, I would not let anybody know you have that cat. The more I look at him (or her) the better he (or she) looks!

112 posted on 03/11/2003 8:12:13 PM PST by AnAmericanMother (. . . have cats (and horses, and Labradors), will travel)
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To: AnAmericanMother
I just ordered a copy of This is the Siamese Cat because you said it explains some of their idiosyncracies and, compared to my other cats, Sam has a few.

She is definitely a girl and always has been. I never noticed that about the photo! All I can say is it must be a play of light. My husband took the photo a couple years ago and didn't notice, either. You are making me want to retouch it.

113 posted on 03/12/2003 8:07:51 AM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: HetLoo
See my post above about Sam "don't call me Samantha", the tomboy girl. LOL!

Here's a photo from my lousy digital about a month after she showed up. She took to 22 year-old Minka (a combo Tonk & black cat).

Sam is a chocolate point according to the vet.

You don't think I should look for the breeder? Sam has been here five years and was fixed a very long time ago.

When she was found, we contacted every authority, animal control, the local pet shops and put posters up on telephone poles all over the place. And no one ever claimed her. Where she was found is about a half mile from an old Interstate, so maybe there was an accident. But I don't think any cattery would be unhappy to discover that the lost kitten is alive and happy. Do you?

114 posted on 03/12/2003 8:22:02 AM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: AnAmericanMother
I would like to know where she came from just in case I ever have an opening for another as wonderful as her. I know nearly nothing about Siamese except for my experience with Sam the past five years, but she amazes me and her looks are stunning. She is starting to get dark on the sides but she stayed nicely pointed for a long time.

Most of all, her personality is amazing. She charms everyone she meets and many people have jokingly (I hope) threatened to kidnap her.

Do you (or anybody) have any idea how much a kitten like that would cost with papers?

115 posted on 03/12/2003 8:28:40 AM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: Semper911
Kinda hard NOT to stare at my 24 pound cat as she's trying to jump at me.
She's quite a trip...
As long as she's not landing on me.
116 posted on 03/12/2003 10:30:48 AM PST by Darksheare (<===The modern day French all have grandfathers that said "Frauleine" to their grandmothers.)
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To: sciencediet
Yup, that picture makes it clear :) definitely a chocolate!

*I* would be thrilled to know a cat I had lost for 5 years was safe and happy, but you can never tell, some breeders might still want her back. What state are you in? My guess is she was sold to someone who dumped her. I just can't imagine any breeder letting that nice of a cat - gorgeous points for a choccy, I thought she was a blue primarily because you don't see chocs with points like that often - get lost.

If you want another like her, I would suggest finding out what breeders are in your area and start looking for who has cats that look like her. From the look of her it would be someone who specializes in chocolates.
117 posted on 03/12/2003 11:13:01 AM PST by HetLoo
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To: sciencediet
Oh, a kitten like that with papers would be cheap at $350, if sold as a pet typical range is 350 - 500. If sold for showing then your looking 700 - 1000. Also, it depends on what part of the country your in. Midwest/South are cheaper, the coasts are ridiculously high.
118 posted on 03/12/2003 11:19:12 AM PST by HetLoo
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To: HetLoo
The vet said the same as you, that she was gorgeous. He also said chocolate points are rare - is that true?

Why do you think they might want her back if I ever found the cattery? She's spayed and has been with me so long that we are so bonded I feel like a Siamese twin.

She showed up when I was home from a major operation and bedridden for a month. She was about 12-16 weeks old and her hair was so thin you could see her skin. She spent the month in bed with me and policed the visiting nurses, examining everything they brought and making sure they did no harm.

We had her at least a month before I was able to get her to the vet when he guessed her age.

I have seen sealpoints who get very dark, nearly losing their points, but she has stayed pretty white and if you look closely, her ear points at 5 yo are not quite touching (something you or another mentioned here).

Thank you for all your information. This is fascinating and proves I no little about the breed.

119 posted on 03/12/2003 11:31:01 AM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: HetLoo
I'm in Mass.
120 posted on 03/12/2003 11:31:52 AM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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