Ancient Egyptian Religion

Mummified Cats

Bronze Age—Iron Age Ancient Egypt, Bubastis, Lower Egypt.

The temple of Bastet had a waterway running around it, a statue of Bastet herself, the cat goddess, and lots of friendly, well-looked-after cats lying around, sitting, sunning themselves.

‘What would you have felt when you were walking around?’ asked Miranda.

‘In the Temple of Bastet at Bubastis east of the Nile Delta? It was a lovely place by all accounts.’ said Quintin. ‘Set in a depression, not as large as some temple compounds elsewhere, with a waterway running around it, a statue of Bastet herself, the cat goddess, and lots of friendly, well-looked-after cats lying around, sitting, sunning themselves. People of the time really liked it. They had festivals there and things.’

‘You would also know, like everybody else, that when a family pet or a cat whose job it was to keep down the mice around a granary died, it would be given exactly the same funerary treatment as a human when they die,' replied Miranda. 'A huge graveyard of mummified cats was found in Egypt in the late Victorian period, over eighty-thousand mummies, all of the second millennium BC. And thousands more have been found elsewhere. So what would you feel as you stroked one of these cats sitting in the dappled sunlight beneath a fig tree in the temple compound, as the cat responded to your touch and jumped up to be friendly, looking you straight in the eye and wanting to play? Knowing as you do the stories of the goddess Bastet? Knowing, perhaps, that the whole idea behind mummification was to imitate the pupae of the scarab beetle that renews itself from the crud. And don't forget that Herodotus, the Greek historian writing in the sixth century BC, said of the Egyptians that they believed that human souls are immortal and become reincarnated into the bodies of animals, fish and birds, before returning once again to live another life in human form. What would the priestess have taught you when you were a child?'

‘That animals have the same soul as a human.'

references

Bubastis - Wikipedia

goddess Bastet - Wikipedia

Cats in Ancient Egypt - Minnesota State University EMuseum.

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