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What medieval manuscripts teach us about our ancestors’ pets

49 points| rntn | 3 years ago |theconversation.com

14 comments

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[+] dav_Oz|3 years ago|reply
>Their presumed links with paganism and witchcraft meant they were often treated with suspicion.

Unfortunately, one of the most cruel forms [0] of medieval "suspicion"-treating. I will spare the details, here.

The article is quite shallow, the links are a much better read e.g.:

>One European pilgrim who traveled to the Middle East even noted that among the differences between Muslims and Christians was that “They like cats, while we like dogs.[1]

Or those wiki-articles [2],[3].

[0]https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat-burning

[1]https://www.medievalists.net/2013/10/why-cats-were-hated-in-...

[2]https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_depictions_of_dogs

[3]https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_depictions_of_cats

[+] xvilka|3 years ago|reply
Savages. Dark Ages, indeed.
[+] derriz|3 years ago|reply
I'm a bit disappointed which the shallowness of the article. And now mention of the (relatively well known?) cat poem, Pangur Bán?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pangur_Bán

[+] cyocum|3 years ago|reply
If you are interested in cats in Early Medieval Ireland, I would recommend reading "Catṡlechta and other medieval legal material relating to cats" by Kevin Murray in Celtica 25, pp. 143–159.
[+] trabant00|3 years ago|reply
I don't get the point about cats and dogs being status symbols. I'm sure lower class had dogs for security and cats for rodents. Geting a portrait with a pet is a status symbol because of the portait part, not the pet.
[+] ljf|3 years ago|reply
Currently listening to a series of lectures on medieval Britain, and very generally most working people were close to starvation - they couldn't even afford to keep farm animals as the cost to feed them was so high as the field practices at the time were so poor. So while stray dogs and cats may have attached themselves to households or villages, I seriously doubt many except the richer families would have been able to spare the food to feed them and treat them as real pets. And unlikely they would look like the clean attractive pets in the illustrations, if you've met many stray Street cats and dogs.

https://www.europenowjournal.org/2018/09/04/famine-and-deart...

[+] geuis|3 years ago|reply
This article ended entirely too quickly. I was enjoying the displays of medieval cats in domestic situations. Interesting bit of history.
[+] lostlogin|3 years ago|reply
For an article about pets, it’s 95% about cats. I was hoping for creatures less mundane.
[+] jvm___|3 years ago|reply
There's a bunch of old manuscripts and scrolls on some boring topic, but a few have a cat footprint in ink on them, so some monk somewhere was working and had a mischievous cat around.

I think there are examples from all over including Spain.