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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
Hy-Brasil sounded familiar to me so I went digging, even drug out my old CFA yearbooks from the seventies but didn't turn up any references. :) Oh well, its loads of fun to hear stories about Siamese from the "old days", can't say I particularly liked the look of Siamese from the 60's and 70's, asthetically they are generally more pleasing nowadays - to me anyway.

Interesting to hear they were still struggling with the neotnic standard in those days as well, and I thought Siamese were supposed to have been bigger back then. Thank God they finally took the word "dainty" out of the standard! I bet I would have liked your boy, we like Siamese to aspire to the description "statuesque", which 99% of todays cats only reach "miniatures". Our current boys have been docked and overlooked on account of their size on a regular basis but we are bound and determined that WILL change :)
121 posted on 03/12/2003 2:27:39 PM PST by HetLoo (www.puresiamese.com)
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To: sciencediet
"The vet said the same as you, that she was gorgeous. He also said chocolate points are rare - is that true? "

Not as rare as lilacs but rarer than seals or blues. Seals are the dominant color, which is why there are so many, then blue is a dilute of seal. Chocolate is the recessive form of seal (so you need two recessive genes to get it) and lilac is the dilute of the recessive so the rarest to get.

"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. "

Because some cat breeders are freaks. Sorry, there just isn't any other way to describe it (unless you want to use the word "nazi") but not all of them are that way and legally, I think they would have a very hard time trying to get back after all these years so you might be safe.

"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."

Oh, poor kitty! Looks like you did a wonderful job with her. She looks just beautiful.

"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)."

Chocolates are supposed to stay white, as are lilacs though some shading is allowed with age and truth is some of those colors shade pretty young anyway. Coat color on Siamese is heat dependent. If your cat was kept in a cold environment, you would notice her coat darken a lot more. That it is still pretty white at 5 years is a hallmark of good breeding in chocolates, one reason why I think her breeder specialized in them.

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

Siamese are one of the easiest breeds to learn about in part because they've been around for a very long time and their genetics are very simple if you stick with the four original colors - one reason I prefer breeding them, I would hate to sort out tabbies and ticking and who's masking what...

122 posted on 03/12/2003 2:39:08 PM PST by HetLoo (www.puresiamese.com)
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To: sciencediet
If you really want to trace her origin, start at this site www.breedlist.com, look for siamese breeders in massachusetts (Minghou works with chocolates and lilacs) send them a nice face-on picture of your cat with her story and ask if they think it could have come from their cattery. Make sure to tell them the cat has been spayed and you are only inquiring because you may want another cat just like her some day. See where it gets you.
123 posted on 03/12/2003 2:57:36 PM PST by HetLoo
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To: sciencediet
Yup, the rear elevation establishes conclusively that SHE is a girl. She looks a little heavier than in the other photo, but I can see her ears really well and they look quite nice. (She's also obviously a TOTALLY HAPPY cat - look at that Siamese smile and scrunched around tail).

I'm really just teasing about the breeder, some of 'em are really funny about "their" cats - they never really let them go. I used to take my champion back to "visit" his "birth family" - he was a son of Hatcher Granville's oldest tom (Sonnenhof's Apache of Barba) and was always glad to see him. He would call on all his cousins and uncles and aunts - he made best friends with Hatcher's "boss neuter" Kinkajou (they looked a lot alike) and they would "walk the rounds" around the house, shoulder to shoulder, making sure that all the kittens and queens were behaving themselves.

I'll bet what happened is that somebody bought a breeder's kitten and then couldn't put up with the Siamese voice or the Siamese personality, and rather than return the kit just dumped it by the side of the road. You might take a head shot, front and side (like a mug shot) and circulate it to local breeders seeing if they recognize her. There is a strong family resemblance in most breeders' bloodlines - I could have picked any of MY kittens out of a lineup! :-D

124 posted on 03/12/2003 4:05:00 PM PST by AnAmericanMother (. . . "stately, kindly, lordly friend - condescend here to sit by me.")
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To: sciencediet
Prices depend a lot on the breeder's reputation and that of the sire and dam. A "pet quality" kitten from, say, a tom with a championship and a good pedigree behind him, and a decent queen (say the daughter of a champion herself) should run you anywhere between $300-$400 with a neuter-spay agreement. The prices go up as high as you like from there, I know people who have paid a grand for the "right" cat - one with several very strong bloodlines behind him and already campaigning on the circuit. Once a cat gets a Grand under his belt and starts siring winners, you can pretty much name your price.
125 posted on 03/12/2003 4:08:24 PM PST by AnAmericanMother (. . . "stately, kindly, lordly friend - condescend here to sit by me.")
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To: HetLoo; AnAmericanMother
I thought she darkened this winter. She's always been a heat seeking missle (if I'd known I'd have bought that heating pad she's always wanted). If she stays warm, she might stay lighter longer?

I'm going to take your advice and not try to find the breeder. When I ran into you and AnAmericanMother and realized you knew a lot it, got my hopes up that the mystery could be solved. Sam amazes and makes me laugh every day and I could never let her go. She's got me wrapped around her little finger to the point my vacations aren't as long as they used to be.

126 posted on 03/12/2003 4:09:35 PM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: spetznaz
Sort of a cute cat website except they do state that Dick Cheney makes their cat so sick...blah blah blah.
127 posted on 03/12/2003 4:11:35 PM PST by arasina
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To: HetLoo
Thanks! That's a good idea to ask Minghou. That Breed List link is fantastic; I'd done searches on Yahoo and Google and not come up with something like that! I looked through some of the Siamese there and they all have different heads. I see how one can distinguish them by family - it is easier to see than I thought it would be.
128 posted on 03/12/2003 4:16:38 PM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: radu
Pinging you for a really cool cat thread!
129 posted on 03/12/2003 4:18:27 PM PST by TEXOKIE
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To: AnAmericanMother
I thought that couch pose would help. That's when she might have been six months old. Having had a multi-cat household all my life, maybe 30 or 40 cats, I can confidently say that this is the happiest cat I have ever seen. She's got tremendous chutzpah yet is the gentlest pet. She's a genius, too. :)

My husband's theory, and he's sticking with it, is that someone dump them. Maybe the pair were a gift and the giftee didn't want them. I heard the animal control officer who kept the male, said the boy was a sealpoint.

130 posted on 03/12/2003 4:24:18 PM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: vannrox
Very interesting, I enjoy my cats.
131 posted on 03/12/2003 4:31:20 PM PST by Big Horn
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To: AnAmericanMother
If I might ask, can you tell me some of the differences between show quality and pet quality? It's just that I have always been so curious about this amazing cat. Everybody wants her.

One thing that concerns me is her appetite. She has caused us to keep an impeccably clean kitchen because anything that's edible is fair game for her - she's like a dog that way - except that she'll dive into the garbage disposal - you walk into the kitchen and see a long skinny tail sticking straight up from the sink. LOL!

132 posted on 03/12/2003 4:34:08 PM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: HetLoo
I went and dug out my old books - Cormac was born in November '78 and made his championship in early '80 (that Johnson City show was around the first of the year IIRC). I wish I had a photo of him up on the 'net, I'll have to go digging through my scrapbooks and scan something.

My current cats are sort of a grab-bag. The little Lilac whose picture is back up this thread is descended from Maloja's Mr. B, Maloja's Billy Budd (I LOVE the Maloja look - majestic blue points!), the Taikablu BP line, and a whole crowd of Brock'Ann Lilacs. Her grouchy great-uncle the Blue Point is also a Maloja cat on his sire's side, his dam was a delightful BP lady but had Ophir and Thaibok in her background - NOT good for temperament! (I personally witnessed Thaibok Teriyaki take a large chunk out of a judge in the ring next to me!) He also has Fan-T-Cee and Quire Gal-X-C back of him. My "middle cat" the neurotic Siamese was purchased at a show when I fell in love with her dam. She was bred by Catananda, mostly Singa and Bel Canto on her sire's side, and Chanthara on her dam's. She is afraid of children but she loves our dog (go figure!) I think she was traumatized when my kids were toddlers . . . :-(

Went to your website and LOVE your kitties! The blue point girl at 11 mos. is the spitting image of my middle girl, she is now 12, my big male is 14, and the little Lilac is 2 and running the others ragged.

133 posted on 03/12/2003 4:38:41 PM PST by AnAmericanMother (. . . "stately, kindly, lordly friend - condescend here to sit by me.")
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To: ActionNewsBill; AppyPappy
....Bob brings home a bird or chipmunk....

Bob is a murderer.

134 posted on 03/12/2003 4:44:28 PM PST by bert (Don't Panic !)
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To: sciencediet
When my Lilac girl was a brand new kitty and we brought her home, at about 12 weeks, her fur was so sparse and pale that when she got excited and "fluffed" you could see the pinky skin underneath. She now however has a full and still quite pale coat!

Chocolates are the next-to-rarest color of the four "REAL" colors (there are all sorts of ugly weird ones like Tortie-Point - looks like the cat got left out in the rain). The Seal is dominant, the Blue is a recessive, so a Seal may carry a Blue gene but a Blue will not carry a Seal gene. To complicate matters there is a separate recessive "dilute" factor which will turn a Seal into a Chocolate or a Blue into a Lilac. A Lilac is Blue + dilute (two recessives) and when bred to another Lilac will always give you nothing but Lilacs. Seals may carry both the blue and dilute factors, Blues may carry the dilute factor, and Chocolates may carry the Blue factor since they are a "Seal dilute". (Boy - I bet that doesn't make much sense. Even to me.)

The colors are controlled by heat - the pigment is heat-sensitive and will "burn out". My middle cat for reasons best known to herself likes to sleep with the right side of her face pressed against one of the hot air registers - so she has a little grid pattern in her mask on that side. It looks REALLY weird, but she's happy and she's not shown, so who cares? The big guy sleeps in the bathtub in hot weather, so his sides are VERY dark!

135 posted on 03/12/2003 4:49:20 PM PST by AnAmericanMother (. . . "stately, kindly, lordly friend - condescend here to sit by me.")
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To: sciencediet
If I might ask, can you tell me some of the differences between show quality and pet quality?

If I knew the answer to THAT question, I would have Cat of the Year all the time . . . ;-)

The show quality cat more nearly meets the Breed Standard that is published by the CFA: CFA Siamese Standard

The pet quality cat is one that the breeder would not want to breed from - it usually has some significant deviation from the standard and so would not improve the breed. I would say that the most common things you will see are a steep "break" or stop in the profile at the eyes (a Siamese ought to have as near a smooth line from between the ears to the tip of the nose as possible), a short or thick or kinked tail, undersized ears, or big feet. Muddy or uneven coloring and pale washed out eye color are two other things that will send a cat to the vet to be neutered or spayed.

So long as your kitty is very active, don't worry about her eating. If she's bounding around the house like a lunatic, she's burning all those calories as fast as she can consume them. If her eyes are clear and bright, her coat is shiny and not "staring" - rough and uneven with spiky patches, and she remains active and has good muscle tone, don't worry. That's just her body type, and if you are used to your standard Domestic Shorthair barn cat that probably has a significant amount of heavyweight longhair blood, she's going to look skinny to you. If she seems to be LOSING weight, loses the gloss on her coat, or anything like that, ask the vet to check her out. You also might consider that an active Siamese may need a premium food to get enough quality calories. I now feed mine Pinnacle, which is a sort of kitty natural health food diet, but when I was showing they all ate Science Diet and Iams dry food, supplemented with thawed frozen horsemeat and liquid vitamins.

136 posted on 03/12/2003 5:07:07 PM PST by AnAmericanMother (. . . "stately, kindly, lordly friend - condescend here to sit by me.")
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To: vannrox
I took in a Egyptian Mau years ago and it was very beautiful. I loved her markings. She was good natured. Unfortunately she was killed by the garage door coming down on her.
137 posted on 03/12/2003 5:10:42 PM PST by Vicki (Truth and Reality)
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To: sciencediet
if I'd known I'd have bought that heating pad she's always wanted

LOL! There are pet stores that will happily sell to you a nice sheepskin bed with a pressure sensitive heating pad thermostat controlled for optimum kitty temperature! My cats shove each other out of the way to sleep in it! Of course, they also have a cat tree, a cat hammock in a sunny window, the top shelves of the closet, the bathtub, the kitchen sink (middle cat likes to sleep there), or the middle of whatever book I'm reading . . .

138 posted on 03/12/2003 5:11:43 PM PST by AnAmericanMother (. . . "stately, kindly, lordly friend - condescend here to sit by me.")
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To: AnAmericanMother
Wow, I never heard that about Teriyaki before! He is about 5 generations behind our breeding girl (a lilac) and I always LOVED the way he looks. His profile is to-die-for even by todays standards.

Our girl is Oklahoma bred and comes from older lines, In Lieu (which was right here in Tulsa) Chosen - another OK cattery, Nor-Bob and some others. Consequently she's not as typey as todays show cats and her kits retain some of the classic look. But, she makes up for it by instilling a wonderful, people loving temperment on the more extreme type our boys bring.

This is the father of the blue girl (and all the kits on that page) He is from australia out of Tweema lines

I don't think I've ever heard of Taikablu or Brock'Ann, but I've heard Fan-T-Cee inbred out the wazoo and had some health issues to show for it.

139 posted on 03/12/2003 5:26:35 PM PST by HetLoo
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To: AnAmericanMother
Is it true that Siamese breeders keep kittens longer than other breeds? "Fluffed"? It's the first cat I can recall whose hair stands up on her hips at the base of her tail when she's playful.

I sort of understand your genetics lesson and hope I won't forget it - no, I'm going to paste it into Notepad and read it a few more times.

Okay, so if I heated up the cat, she might lighten up? Do people who show theirs have techniques, like putting sweaters on them?

140 posted on 03/12/2003 5:28:57 PM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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