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Did you know that cats are over 30 million years old? Most domestic cats of today are thought to have descended from the African wild cat. |

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What is an AILUROPHILE?...One who loves cats...ETYMOLOGY: Greek ailouros, cat + –phile. The
domestication process began about 3,000 BC in Egypt when cats were enlisted
to protect grain silos from rodents. These felines became so valuable that
they were regarded as gods. The basic domestic cat was descendant from this
Egyptian stock. The first true cats were found at the beginning of the Pliocene Period, which was about 12 million years ago. The evolutionary processes led to three main types of cats: The Forest Cat, the Afrivan Wild Cat and The Asiatic Desert Cat.
Ancestors resembling modern cats first appeared about 10 million
years ago, but they were completely wild and did not associate with
humans. As humans learned to farm, their grain crops attracted mice and
birds, and these, in turn, attracted cats.
Gradually, around 8,000 years ago, cats and humans learned that
they could form a mutually beneficial relationship --the humans
protected and sheltered cats who, in return, protected their human's
grain supplies.
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Sacred to Egypt
![]() The cat was sacred to the Egyptian goddess Bast. Cemeteries containing the bodies of mummified sacred cats have been discovered with bronze statues of cats, is dated around 600 B.C.
Cats are known to have been a part of Egyptian households by 1600 B.C. although they were not deified until much later.
Superstitions
Scottish immigrants believed a cat that entered a room where a
body was awaiting burial had to be killed at once. If she were
not, the next person the cat touched would be struck blind! The fear of the cat was so great that it was believed evil would strike down anyone who harmed a cat. A person who kicked a cat was certainly to develop rheumatism in that leg! A farmer who killed a cat could expect a mysterious illness to kill off his cattle. Cat superstitions persist to this day. For the most part, Americans believe white cats are lucky and black cats are unlucky. In Great Britain the reverse is thought to be true.
In some parts of the old world, the cat was placed in an empty and waiting cradle of a newlywed, the couple in the belief she would quickly grant their wish for children. The Pennsylvania Dutch continue that time-honored custom today
The phrase, let the cat out of the bag means to disclose a secret. It's origin: a favorite country trick was to substitute a cat for a pig at market. If you let the cat out of the bag you disclosed the trick - and avoided buying a pig in a poke (bag)
Legend
From
Poland comes the story of the pussy willow, a plant that has been named for
the cat the world over. Long ago, a mother cat cried inconsolably on the
banks of a river in which her kittens were drowning. To help her, the
willows swept their long branches into the water as lifelines for the little
kittens. Every spring since, buds with the soft feel of a kittens silky fur
open at the tips of willow branches. Source: Pet Care Report/
Cats and their History - Ralston Purina Co.
Religious
Persecution
Cats and Witches
A very
early record of the linking together of witches and cats concerns the
ceremony of Cat Wednesday which took place in the city of Metz in Northern
France. This involved hundreds of cats being burnt alive in the belief
that they were witches in disguise Persecution in the 13th century
Papal
might was brought down upon witches and cats in the 13th century when
horrible acts of atrocity were carried out on humans and felines. Black
cats in particular were believed to be agents of the devil, especially if
owned by an elderly woman.
The Celts
The
Celts believed that cats had once been human and had been changed into
felines as punishment for their wicked ways. Cats were sometimes tied up
with silver ropes because it was believed that these creatures had the
ability to protect hallowed treasures. Later, Catholic culture mixed
with Celtic beliefs and the cat became thought to be the witch's
familiar.
A 17th century
English woman, Joan Flower, along with her two daughters, was hung for
practicing witchcraft. Joan and her daughters were employed by the
Earl of Rutland and were accused of cursing his family. His sons had
died, and his wife had become barren, and someone had to take the
blame for it. It was said that the daughters had stolen some of the
Earl's possessions and given them to their mother who rubbed them on
the fur of her cat uttering curses. Nothing is recorded about the fate
of the cat, but it is unlikely that it escaped with its life.
Witches and cats have
had a long association with Halloween. Because cats are nocturnal
creatures and do their roaming at night, they were seen as the
servants of witches and out to harm those that the witches had cursed.
It was also believed by some that witches had the supernatural power
to change into cats and so more easily carry out their wicked deeds
and escape detection. Mythical stories recount great gatherings of
witches when the seasons changed, on the eve of May Day and on the eve
of October 31 Halloween.
Cats in Asia
Cats were honored and protected in Asia because the humans there
recognized the value of our services in protecting food crops and the
silk worm industry from destruction by rodents.
Cats in Thailand Cats have
guarded temples in Thailand and other parts of Asia for centuries. One
Thai legend says that hightly spiritual people reicarnate as cats as
their last stage on the way to heaven. Another explains the dark patches
on the shoulders of some Siamese cats as "temple marks" left by Buddha's
fingers when he touched them in blessing.
Cats and Islam
Islamic
lore includes many tales about the prophet Mohammed and his beloved
cats. One story tells how a considerate cat saved the prophet from death
by snakebite. Another tells of Mohammed's kindness in cutting off the
sleeve of his robe rather than disturb Muezza, the cat who was sleeping
on it. ( She said thanks by sharing her special powers with the
prophet...or so it is alleged. ) A Famous Story Cats and Hindu
The Greeks
and Their cats
The Greeks credited their goddess Artemis with creating the cat and
ascending to the moon in feline form Cats and the Romans
The Romans gave Venus, their goddess of love, many of the
attributes of Bastet and often depicted the goddess with a cat.
Some historians believe importing cats to England was the
Romans' greatest contribution toward civilizing the British. The Norse
For transportation, the Norse fertility goddess Freya used a
cat-drawn chariot.
Finnish people thought the souls of the dead were collected by
cats drawing a sled. In Java
When people in Java wanted to make it rain, they would bathe two
cats, a male and female, then carry them in a procession with
music.
In America and other Christian
countries, the tabby cat has a legend of its own. As the Christ
child lay in the manger, no animal - not even the gentle donkey
or the faithful shepherd dog - could soothe Him to sleep. But
when a little tabby jumped lightly into the manger and began to
purr a lullaby, the Babe fell asleep at last. Ever since, all
tabbies' foreheads have borne an M in token for the Madonna's
gratitude.
Expressions
Let the cat out of the bag: To
reveal a secret. In medieval times, piglets were taken to
markets and sold in sacks. Occasionally, an unscrupulous vendor
would try to pass off a cat or puppy in a bag as a piglet. If
the cat escaped in view of the potential buyer, so did the
secret. Kitty-corner
or catty-corner: Comes from catercorner, the old dialectical
term for diagonal, which itself comes from the French word "quatre,"
or four. Raining cats
and dogs: A driving rain. This ever-popular expression first
appeared in print in 1653. ("It shall raine ... dogs and
polecats.") No one has a definitive explanation for where it
comes from, but everyone has a theory. Not enough
room to swing a cat: A crowded, tight spa
Cat Nights -
This term harks back to the days when people believed in witches. An
old Irish legend says that a witch could turn into a cat and regain
herself eight times, but on the ninth time, in August, she couldn’t
change back, hence the saying: “A cat has nine lives.” Because August
is a “yowly” time for cats, this may have prompted the speculation
about witches on the prowl in the first place.
Mythology and Folklore of the Manx When Filling the ark and the rains
came down, Noah closed the door and caught the tail of a
cat Cats from ships wrecked on the
coasts around the Isle of Man came ashore and made the
Island their home Mother cats bit off the tails of
their kittens to keep them from being snatched by the
invading Scandinavians, who cut off the tiles and used
them for decorating their helmets |
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PEOPLE And Their CATS
From Letters to His Children
DARLING QUENTIN:
When we shifted camp we came down here and found a funny little wooden shanty, put up by some people who now and then come out here and sleep in it when they fish or shoot. The only living thing around it was a pussy-cat. She was most friendly and pleasant, and we found that she had been living here for two years. When people were in the neighborhood, she would take what scraps she could get, but the rest of the time she would catch her own game for herself. She was pretty thin when we came, and has already fattened visibly. She was not in the least disconcerted by the appearance of the hounds, and none of them paid the slightest attention to her when she wandered about among them. We are camped on the edge of a lake. This morning before breakfast I had a good swim in it, the water being warmer than the air, and this evening I rowed on it in the moonlight. Every night we hear the great owls hoot and laugh in uncanny fashion.
Plutarch and his theory
The Greek author, Plutarch, had a hair-brained theory about cats. He thought
that a female cat produced one cat in her first litter, two in her second, and
so on till she reached twenty eight.
When she reached that magic number, he believed that she ceased bearing kittens.
His theory was based upon the connection, at that time, with cats and the moon -
since there are 28 days in the lunar moon. |
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