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  • In Egyptian society cats seem to have had three distinct roles. They were pest

  • controllers, as they had been for the previous 5,000 years, and from what we

  • know of what was written about their role at the time, the Egyptians valued

  • them particularly for their their ability to chase snakes away. It seems a little

  • bit bizarre nowadays to think that cats are good predators of snakes. There isn't

  • much evidence for them preying on snakes anywhere in the world, but the Egyptians

  • definitely thought they were. Nevertheless, I think they must have

  • also just been pest controllers of mice and rats. The second role was as

  • household pets. We know that the aristocracy had them as pets, but we

  • also know that quite humble people, craftsmen for example, had them as pets

  • because there are little sketches made by the people who were building the temples

  • little drawings they'd make on bits of limestone during

  • their lunch breaksshowing their pet cats. So, right the way through society,

  • even several thousand years ago, the Egyptians kept cats as pets. Then the

  • third role was that in religion. They previously worshiped the lion goddess called

  • Bastet and Bastet seemed to become associated particularly with

  • domestic cats and almost lost the association with the lion. What was not

  • so good for cats, was that meant that a lot of people wanted mummified

  • cats as offerings to make to the Goddess.

  • So a whole breeding programme for cats run by priests started. These cats were

  • killed when they were about a year old, mummified, wrapped up in elaborate

  • wrappings and then offered for sale at the temple where you could go along on a

  • feast day, buy a cat and give it back to the priests who would then entomb it

  • for you. And these lasted in their tombs right through to

  • the Victorian era when they were dug up and many of them were ground up to

  • make into fertiliser. So there were millions and millions of cats treated in

  • this wayit was a huge industry. It's rather bizarre, I think, to us today to

  • think of how the Egyptians must have viewed catsthey had pet cats, they had pest-

  • controlling cats and then they must have known that just behind the temple, were

  • lots of cats being killed every day for them to offer up to the Goddess. How

  • they squared all of those different attitudes in their minds we shall never

  • know, but it does seem rather odd to us today.

In Egyptian society cats seem to have had three distinct roles. They were pest

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