Members

The Domestic Cat in Ancient Egypt

In our modern world, there are now as many people who have a cat in their homes are there are with dogs. But this love of cats is not a recent phenomenon and one of the civilizations with the greatest passion for their cats was Ancient Egypt.

Sacred

For the Ancient Egyptians, the cat was called Mau and were considered to be sacred. DNA tests have shown that these ancient house cats were first domesticated in the Middle East from a subspecies of the Wildcat there, around 10,000 years ago. Some thousands of years later, the pet cat had made its way to Egypt where both Upper and Lower Egypt treated them as part of the religion of the land.

In fact, Egypt had a number of gods and goddess that were represented as a cat, or in a cat type form. These included Mafdet, the goddess of justice and Egypt images who was shown with a lion's head and the more famous Bast, the cat goddess who came to represent protection, fertility and motherhood.

Bubastis

Bubastis became the center of worship for Bast in the New Kingdom, an important city on the east of the Nile Delta. Here Bast became associated with the positive aspects of the sun and its god Ra and the cult gained a huge following with thousands of pilgrims travelling each year to the city. Bubastis became another name for the goddess.

The marketplace at Bubastis also became key for the trading of images of the goddess and these were usually in the image of cats. Bronze sculpture and amulets were commonly created for worshipers while the image of a cat and kittens was made into a fertility amulet for women trying to conceive. Their prayer would be that Bast gave them the same number of children as kittens on the amulet.

The annual celebration of Bast held in the city was one of the most popular events in the calendar and Greek historian Herodotus wrote about it. Pilgrims would travel down the Nile in barges, celebrating until they arrived at the city where feasts were held in the goddess honor and sacrifices made.

Mummification

Because cats were viewed as sacred, some of them were given the same mummification rituals after death as humans. One tomb found near the town of Beni Hasan had 80,000 cat mummies inside, dating from 1000BC onward. Mummified cats were seen as being given in offering to the cat goddess Bast.

Herodotus also noted that many cats, when they died, were taken to Bubastis to be mummified. Not all cats were mummified and Swiss Egyptologist Edouard Naville found a burial site near the city that held over 720 cubic feet of cat remains, including bones in burial pits that had been burned.

Views: 2

Comment

You need to be a member of On Feet Nation to add comments!

Join On Feet Nation

© 2024   Created by PH the vintage.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service