History

Meet Bastet, the Egyptian cat goddess who protected the king and was ‘god of all things nice’

Egyptians have a very rich and intriguing history that has been retold countless times by historians over time.

One such well researched and written aspect is their affiliations to gods and how gods formed an integral part of the Egyptian society.

Many ancient Egyptian deities appear as animals which are known to represent the people’s deep connection to nature. There were several feline deities in ancient Egypt but one that had a huge cult and much prominence was the goddess Bastet.

Bastet, also known as the cat goddess of joy, passion and love, women, pleasure and ‘all things nice’, was once believed to be a ferocious protector of kings and an avenger.

With time, the meanings associated with the goddess ameliorated to the more sensual and domesticated cat around 1500 BCE.

Due to the fertility of domestic cats, and their graceful, coy, and friendly nature, Bastet was also given these attributes and became widely associated with fertility, sensuality, grace, and family as well.

Photo: Amazon

She was also one of the chief feminine deities in the pantheon, being the goddess of sex and pregnancy, of childbirth and motherhood.

Scholars say she gained so much popularity around the 22nd Dynasty of Hedjkheperre Setepenre Shoshenq I in 954 BC. Bastet’s cult evolved and she became one of the few deities who had its place of worship in a self-named city, Bubastis.

Hedjkheperre made Bubastis his center and began building a sophisticated temple that was later completed by his grandson, Osorokon III.

Usbaste, Bast, Baast, Baset or more widely Bastet has different school of thoughts on the origin of her name. Some have said its true meaning is “She of the Ointment Jar” that was derived from hieroglyphics.

Early representations of her were that of a woman with a lion head which was very similar to the leonine goddess Sekhmat who had a fiercer depiction in her effigies.

The slender woman with the catlike head “carries an ancient percussion instrument, the sistrum, in her right hand; a so-called aegis, or breastplate (in Bastet’s case, surmounted with the head of a lioness), in her left hand; and a small bag over her left arm. She wears an elaborately ornamented dress. Her cult was carried to Italy by the Romans, and traces have been found in Rome, Ostia, Nemi, and Pompeii,” writes Britannica.com.

Bastet represented as a woman with the head of a cat. (Kotofeij K. Bajun / CC BY-SA 3.0 )

The usual appearance on the collectables is one of a domestic cat, slender and graceful, surrounded by many kittens. Another common depiction is of a cat seated on its haunches, decorated with jewellery.

MAAS collection

As the violent or aggressive connotations to the god softened so did its statues, from ‘savage avenger to a helper or daily companion.’

Hence, she is sometimes depicted as a domesticated cat with no human attributes which made a cat a revered and sacred animal that contributed to its worship among the Egyptians.

Cats were mummified on a very large scale to appease the deity Bastet and large burial grounds of mummified cats have been discovered at Saqqara burial grounds, Memphis; Bubastis and Speos Artemidos near Beni Hasan.

In fact, ‘cat farming’ became a very lucrative trade due to the large numbers needed for mummification. The burial grounds can be said to have millions of mummified cats. On the contrary, unauthorised killing of cats was one of the highest-ranking offences that was punishable by death.

Diodorus Siculus wrote about a lynching of a Roman citizen in Egypt for killing a cat. According to the account, the citizen was lynched immediately to death by an angry mob of Egyptian citizens.  To them, hurting a cat was a great insult. An accidental or purposeful killing of a cat was still punishable by death.

The goddess was revered as the protector of households and any reverence for Bastet was ‘personified by the pet cat.’

Photo: People

“Once a pet cat would perish from old age, the entire family would descend into a period of profound grief. They would shave off their eyebrows as a sign of mourning and would be in such a sorrowful period until their eyebrows grew back,” said Ancient Origins.

Each year at the festival to honor Bastet, as many as 700,000 people travel the Nile to Bubastis to celebrate with rituals and sacrifices whiles they consume so much wine.

Herodotus had once witnessed such festival and wrote that in attendance were more female worshippers than men. These females probably hoped to be graced with the gift of fertility and be more liberated with their sensuality.

Geraldine Pinch, citing Herodotus, claims, “women were freed from all constraints during the annual festival at Bubastis. They celebrated the festival of the goddess by drinking, dancing, making music, and displaying their genitals.”

This “raising of the skirts” by the women, described by Herodotus, had as much to do with freedom from social constraints as it did with the fertility associated with the goddess.” 

In historic texts, Bastet is mentioned as the royal protector where some say is her most prominent role in history. History has it that she played the role of both a nurse and mother to the king.

Bastet the Egyptian feline goddess. Source: malcapone / Ancient origins

The goddesses son as recorded is Maahes, a Leonine male god conceived with the god Ptah. Maahes was the god of war and knives, known as the Wielder of the Knife, the Scarlet Lord, and the Lord of Slaughter.

He was portrayed as a man with a fearsome head of a lion, like the early effigies of his mother Bastet.

Bastet remained one of the most venerated, widely-known and potent deities worshipped throughout the remainder of Egypt’s history even transcending into the Roman Empire until the rise of Christianity buried the worship of other gods.

Ama Nunoo

Ama Nunoo is an optimist. She believes every situation has its upside no matter how devastating some may be. She has a Master's degree in International Multimedia Journalism from the University of Kent's Centre for Journalism and a Bachelor's in English and Linguistics.

Recent Posts

Larry Demeritte becomes first Caribbean trainer at Kentucky Derby despite cancer battle

Larry Demeritte is the first Caribbean trainer to participate in the Kentucky Derby and the…

25 mins ago

Beyoncé’s name is regarded as a noun in French dictionary …here is why

She is celebrated globally for her groundbreaking work across the music and movie industry. But,…

3 hours ago

Aspiring medical doctor left brain-dead after allegedly being pushed into lake by friend

The family of an aspiring medical doctor is seeking justice after he was left brain-dead…

4 hours ago

Opal Lee awarded nation’s highest civilian honor ahead of receiving her 8th honorary degree

Once more, popular 97-year-old activist Opal Lee has received honor; this time, the President of…

4 hours ago

Career shoplifter gets 30 years after using soft-sided cooler to steal $20k worth of designer sunglasses

A Florida woman described as a career shoplifter was handed a 30-year prison sentence after…

4 hours ago

Cleveland agrees to pay $4.8M to family of teen fatally struck during high-speed police chase

The city of Cleveland, Ohio, has reached a $4.8 million settlement with the family of…

5 hours ago

‘It felt really scary’ – 14-year-old Nigerian ballet sensation on learning he’s largely blind in one eye

Anthony Madu, the 14-year-old Nigerian dancer from Lagos who gained admission to a prestigious ballet…

3 days ago

‘I remember the day when 56 dollars would change my life’: Wayne Brady reveals humble beginnings

Actor-host Wayne Brady recently opened up about his early financial struggles in his now thriving…

3 days ago

This 1-year-old loves to greet people at Target, so the store hired him as its youngest employee

Mia Arianna, also known as @mia.ariannaa on TikTok, helped her son become an honorary team…

3 days ago

Postman drives 379 miles at his own expense to deliver lost World War II letters to a family

Alvin Gauthier, a Grand Prairie USPS postman, recently went above and beyond to brighten a…

3 days ago

Maj. Gen. Fatuma Gaiti Ahmed becomes Kenya’s first-ever female air force head

Maj. Gen. Fatuma Gaiti Ahmed is the first female commander of the air force and…

3 days ago

All Benjamin E. Mays High School seniors gain admission to HBCU Morris Brown College in surprise announcement

Benjamin E. Mays High School brought together its 272 senior class members for a meeting…

3 days ago

Meet the formerly incarcerated single mom who has gone viral for passing bar exam on first try

Afrika Owes' emotional response to learning that she had passed the bar exam on her…

3 days ago

New York attorney accused of hiring hitman to kill Zimbabwean ex-wife sentenced

A 49-year-old New York attorney was on April 26 sentenced to 10 years in federal…

3 days ago

Cher, 77, who is dating 38-year-old Alexander Edwards, explains why she dates younger men

During an appearance on The Jennifer Hudson Show on Wednesday, pop legend Cher opened up…

3 days ago