Cats known in Ancient Egypt
as the miw played a large role in olden Egyptian society. Beginning as
a wild, untamed species, cats were useful for keeping down rats
populations in the Egyptians' crops and harvests; through exposure to
humans, the cat population became domesticated over time and learned to
coexist with the human population. The people inhabiting the area which
would later become unified and known as Upper and Lower Egypt had a religion centering on the worship of animals, of which the cat became one.
Originally
praised for its aid to humans in controlling rats and its ability to
fight and kill snakes, the domesticated cat slowly became a symbol of
grace and poise. The goddess Mafdet, the deification of justice and
execution, was a fierce lion-headed goddess. The cat goddess Bast
finally replaced the cult of Mafdet, and Bast's image softened over
time and she became the deity representing protection, fertility, and
motherhood.
As
a revered animal and one very important to Egyptian society and
religion, the cat was afforded the same mummification after death as
humans. Mummified cats were given in offering to Bast; in 1888, an
Egyptian farmer accidentally uncovered a large tomb containing tens of
thousands of mummified cats and kittens. This discovery outside the
town of Beni Hasan contained around eighty thousand cat mummies, dating back to 1000-2000 BC.