Egypt Animals History

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Pages: 4

After the first cat was domesticated in ancient Egypt thousands of years ago, fascination for the feline never stops growing. As a result, a lot of urban legends about the animal traveled through the centuries across different nations.

Who has not heard of the superstition that if a black cat crosses your path, it will bring bad luck? Cat lover or not, people are certainly aware of the saying that a cat has nine lives.

Cats and babies

Because of these urban legends, in some parts of Europe, pregnant women were discouraged from picking up a cat or letting the feline sleep in her hap. The warning is because of folklore that the baby will be born with a mole or wart or will be hairy because of the cat encounter with the pregnant woman. In England,
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He introduced images and real versions of the cat -- which Egyptians considered sacred – by painting cats on the shields of his soldiers. Because Egyptian soldiers loathed killing the sacred animal, they just let the Persians gain victory and take over Egypt.

Predictor of the future

Meanwhile, ancient Egyptians used the cat to predict the future. They observed the animal every time it twitches its whiskers, yawn, sneeze, or stretch which foretold an event, Richard Harland noted. If a cat slept with its four paws tucked under its body, it was interpreted as bad weather is coming.

But for French peasants, the cat was a fortune hunter. They looked first for a place where five roads meet and then let loose a black cat and follow the path that the cat will traverse out of the belief that the animal will lead them to a buried treasure.

Among Dutch people, they believe that the creature is a gossip monger. That is why when they have private family discussions, the cat is not allowed in the room for fear that the animal will spread what they talked about around