Cat In History

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Cat In History


 

Cat History...
And Where We Fit In...

Cat Prehistory

Cat history and the evolution of the cat dates back about 200 million years to when their earliest ancestors evolved from reptiles.

Miacis - a weasel-like forerunner of cats (and dogs).
Prehistoric remains of cats are few and far between but the dental pattern of modern day cats is similar to that found in fossilised href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creodont">creodonts - primitive fish-eating mammals which lived about 50 million years ago.

However, this genetic line failed to survive and there are no direct descendants today. At the same time, another group of animals called the miacids (which lived 40 - 50 million years ago) also had cat-like cutting teeth. These were small weasel-like forest-dwelling creatures. Not just cat history, but the history of all land dwelling carnivores can be traced back to these animals.

Even though everyone has heard about the "Smilodon - which had canine teeth 8 inches (20cm) or longer - this animal is not in fact related to the big cats found on Earth today. The last sabre toothed "cats" died out as recently as 30, 000 years ago (based on fossil records in Britain) and possibly only 13, 000 years ago (fossil records in California).

Fossils from 12 million years ago are similar to modern small cats. By 3 million years ago there were a wide variety of cats which populated the whole world except the Arctic, Antarctic, Australia and the inhospitable tundra regions. However, Australia does have some indigenous cat-like species e.g. the "marsupial cat". [Click here for a more detailed profile of this animal].

Cat Characteristics

As well as being predators throughout cat history, there are some interesting characteristics that are thought to reflect the origin of the cat as a desert-dwelling creature. One of these is the ability of a cat's kidneys to concentrate urine much more than other domesticated species e.g. dogs.

Cats also demonstrate some unique metabolic characteristics which set them aside from other domesticated animals. As a result they have a specific nutritional requirement for vitamin A and for the essential fatty acid, linolenic acid.

Cat History in The Ancient World

Before there was any companionable association between cats and humans, killer cats hunted our ancestors about 2.5 million years ago. But, thankfully, after a couple of millennia, things changed with our mutual association apparently beginning about 10, 000 years ago.

Cat skeletons have been found in very early human settlements but archaeologists have assumed that they were wild cats. In all likelihood, the first time cats began associating with humans was toward the end of the Stone Age. It took many centuries, however, for the cat to become established as a domestic animal. About 5, 000 years ago (3, 000 B.C.) cats were accepted members of the households of Ancient Egypt. Many of the breeds we now know have evolved from these ancient cats.

The Egyptians used the cat to hunt fish and birds as well as to destroy the rats and mice that infested the grain stocks along the Nile. They called their cats "Mau" and adorned them with jewels and gold earrings.

The cat was considered so valuable that laws protected it, and eventually a cult of cat worship developed that lasted for more than 2, 000 years. The cat goddess Bastet - whose name was also spelled Bast, Pasht, and many other ways - became one of the most sacred of all figures of worship. She was represented by the head of a cat. Soon all cats became sacred to the Egyptians, and all were well cared for.

If someone killed a cat, the punishment was usually death. When a pet cat died, its Egyptian master shaved off his eyebrows as a sign of mourning. After a cat's death, its body was mummified and buried along with mummified mice and saucers of milk in special cemeteries. One cemetery found in the 1800s contained the preserved bodies of more than 300, 000 cats.

Skulls found in Egyptian cat burial grounds mainly come from the species Felis libyca which at that time was a wild cat that inhabited Asia and North Africa. This desert-living cat is now thought to have been the main ancestor of the domestic cats we have today. Migration and interbreeding with native cats resulted (in Europe) in the emergence of a thicker set domestic cat - similar to the European Wild Cat (Felis silvestris).

But the Egyptians may not have been the first people to domesticate the cat. The remains of the world's oldest pet cat was discovered with the remains of a human in a 9, 500-year-old grave on Cyprus, which means the cat was alive 4, 000 years before the appearance of the Egyptians. The burial of the cat with a human makes a strong case that cats had a special place in the daily lives, and in the afterlives of, the people on the island.

Cat Domestication

An Egyptian figure of a cat dating from about 900BC.
The Egyptians had strict laws prohibiting the export of cats; however, because cats were valued in other parts of the world for their rat-catching prowess, they were taken by the Greeks and Romans to most parts of Europe. Naturally, humans would have selected cats with a docile nature and kept those that responded positively to human behaviour. From North Africa, domestication of cats spread through the Middle East, India and into China but human settlements in Europe didn't have domesticated cats until the Romans introduced them much later. While cats didn't reach Japan until 999 A.D., they were prized as pets as well as rodent catchers.

Paintings and inscriptions of cats from 2, 000BC, in Egypt, suggest that they were living with humans as domesticated animals at that time and later the cat became an important religious symbol, even being buried in their own cemeteries.

Cats were kept on ships to control the rodent population and, as a result, the seafaring explorers from Europe carried and introduced domesticated cats all over the world.

Cats In The Middle Ages

The course of cat history took a nasty turn in Europe during the Middle Ages. Cats became an object of superstition and were associated with evil. People who kept cats were suspected of wickedness and were often put to death along with their animals.

In the 13th century, the first witchcraft trials began. The pagan religions held that witches turned into cats and so cats were blamed for everything from souring the beer to spreading disease. It was commonly believed that their teeth contained venom and that their breath caused disease and infection. Any cat that was seen in the company of an old woman was assumed to be a witch's familiar. Hundreds of unfortunate cats were burned alive by people who believed they did the work of the devil.

Pope Gregory IX declared the cat to be a "Diabolical Creature". Cats were hunted, tortured, and sacrificed. On religious feast days, large numbers of cats were sometimes burned alive as part of the celebrations. Live cats were sealed inside the walls of houses and other buildings as they were being constructed, in the belief that this would bring good luck. As the cat population dwindled, the disease-carrying rat population increased, a factor that contributed greatly to the spread of plagues like the Black Death and other epidemics throughout Europe. In fact the domestic cat population of Europe came close to being wiped out.

By the 17th century the cat had begun to regai>Cardinal Richelieu, in France, was noted for his love of cats. Many writers, particularly in France and England, started keeping them as pets and writing about their good qualities. It became fashionable to own and breed cats, especially the long-haired varieties.

By the late 1800s, cat shows were held in England and the United States and cat fanciers' organizations were established. Many of the superstitions that arose during the period of cat persecution, however, are still evident today in the form of such sayings as "A black cat crossing your path brings bad luck."

North American Cat History

Although there were many varieties of wild cats in North America, there was no history of cat domestication until 1749 with the arrival of Europeans. Cats, suffering the long journey by sea, were imported to control the rodent populations in the settlements. Cat history was made and they and their descendents became as favored as pets in the New World as in the Old. Some 60 million cats now populate the U.S.

Art and Cat History

Cats have been portrayed in the works of many great artists, including Leonardo da Vinci, Albrecht Durer, Paul Gauguin, Theodore Gericault, William Hogarth, Edouard Manet, and Pablo Picasso. Probably the best-known cat in the world is Felix the Cat, star of animated cartoon films. Other famous cartoon cats include Krazy Kat and Tom (of Tom and Jerry), both of which had mice for companions. Musicians such as Gioacchino Rossini and Maurice Ravel have also paid homage to the cat in compositions.

Fables and tales about cats are part of humanity's culture. Versions of the Puss in Boots fable occur in almost every language, and the tale of Dick Whittington and his cat is well known. The personality and beauty of cats has inspired many poets.

  • Ode to Spot as composed by Data in Star Trek: The Next Generation

Cat History Now

So where does Egypt's beloved cat stand today? It is estimated that today there are over 60 million cats in America, alone. More than 70, 000 cats and dogs are born each day due to uncontrolled breeding. Many cats have never experienced the luxury of a warm lap and lead hard, cruel, short, tortured lives as strays. Of cats placed in shelters, 75% are euthanized because there is no room or funds to care for them. While we cannot guess at the fate of the cat a thousand years from now, perhaps we can aid in shaping their future world.


whats the differnce between a teacup cat like teacup persian and a teacup dog like a yorkie? (Answers: 3) (Comments: 0)
so iv been wanting a teacup persian and YES i understand that their dwarf because their teacup and everyone keeps saying thiers no such thing i gett the point alredy ! my question is whats the differnce between a teacup dog and a teacup cat? i dont understand how a teacup cat is called dwarfisim wudent that make a teacup dog called a dwarfisim. same thing thier mating a teacup dog with a teacup dog and its gunna come out teacup. same thing with a cat small cat with a small cat and its gunna be small ~so they just classify it as a teacup cat because of its size being (small) SO why does every one wana call it a dwarf? because its the first type of cat in history to be a small. have you ever thought well mabyee ital start in the cat breeds teacup breeds! just like in dogs their was oviously the first teacup breed to start all types of breeds coming out as teacups for ex teacup yorkies teacup chiuhahas teacup palmeranians . mabye persians are the first teacups in the cat breed to start all types of cat breeds being teacups. NOW PEOPLE WANT TO SAY HOW OHHH PERSIANS ARE SPOSE TO BE BIGGER! well its just like normal big yorkies AND then we have the toy small cute teacup ones! just like persians THE BIG PERSIANS and then the teacup ones why wud they call them dwarfs? thats like saying a teacup yorkie is a dwarf? so their really could be a such thing mabye its a new breeding start with cats because we dont reli have teacup toy breeds with cats. and thats saying with dogs wen the first teacup breed came about people proly said ohhh their dwarfs or their runts just being mated for money well look where we stand today with all the teacup dog breeds mabye persian teacups are the start in cat breeds. and if you think bout it you never here how dogs being teacups are dwafisim and how they and how they have generic body funtion problems!! dogs and cats bodys functions pretty much work the same. ones a cat it purs and meows and ones a dog and barks whatever but thier the same. so like ever one wants to say teacup cats NO SUCH their not a breed thing blahh blahh blahh how do you noo teacup persians arent the start of teacups in cat breeds just like in dog breeds their was a first teacup breed. teacup dogs are just smaller dogs like cats being classifed teacup only cause thier smaller no big deal! "their has to be a start to everything" and if you say cruelity for starving cats that is soo sad especialy if thats what they do to make them smaller its rediculous and i deff am not going to support that its sick! but how do you think the first teacup dog became teacup size so they could mate to make a teacup to make a teacup size or nown as small dog onlywaying 4 to 5 pounds fully grown did they starve it to make it only way 4 to 5 pounds fully grown?! soo answerrr back if yuv read this! and give me sum adivee :) thanks. fasion accesory hahahaaa yur funny ! acutally i want it because i need a small breed! and secondly teacup yorkies are perfectyly fine and healthy no differnt then teacup persians gee ! those are great answers thanks! ..

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Dropping a cat off at a shelter? (Answers:2) (Comments: 0)
I am typically a dog person, I love my dogs they are like children in my house. I give them treats, love, walks, every second day I take them to the beach O my I totally adore them. My father in law stays with us and he has this horrible cat. Its the worst cat in history, it never comes to sit by you, never wants to be held by anybody and is the most unloving creature I have ever seen. It also makes a mess everywhere and I hate the hair it gets in everywhere its gross and disgusting and it makes my blood boil over the top and I'm the idiot that is saddled up to clean up after the thing my father in law doesn't lift a finger for it and I even have to feed it and give it water etc. So yes I am not a cat person and I am actually scared that one day I am going to do something to it so would it be so bad of me to just drop it off at a animal shelter? he would be pissed at me and would most likely press charges but its better than stopping to feed it or dump it off next to the road?

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I want to look up cats in history like in catwoman? (Answers: 4) (Comments: 0)
TO ancient egypt to now.

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funniest cat in history

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