Cats in Ancient Egypt were also extremely valued for keeping rats from their vital grain supplies. They stored grains for the off season and cats were a main defence of their food supplies
I think it boils down to 2 big reasons: First, cats have basically saved human agriculture in the past by killing pests. Humans probably saw how efficient they were at killing and revered that. Second, cats are very obviously miniature versions of tigers and lions. Two animals that hold high symbolic significance in many cultures. I wouldn't be surprised if ancient people connecting cats to apex predators was a big part of it.
And of course there is a third reason. Animals where a huge part of their pantheon as with many old religions. The spirit of their gods manifest in animals or so they thought. If you had a cat in your household, you were protected by that god. Sekhmet in this case.
“I meant," said Ipslore bitterly, "what is there in this world that truly makes living worthwhile?" Death thought about it. CATS, he said eventually. CATS ARE NICE.” ― Terry Pratchett, Sourcery
“If cats looked like frogs we'd realize what nasty, cruel little bastards they are. Style. That's what people remember.” ― Terry Pratchett, Lords and Ladies
I love being in museum back-rooms because they're one of the few places outside of Goldilocks that you have the opportunity try several different variety of chairs without ever leaving the same table
It always baffles me when museum only can show something like 2% or less of their collection and it's already so much on display and then you check their reserve and it's even more mind-blowing.
They should open up more branches in rural places with the "b-rate" items. Most people in rural America don't have any access to museums. It would go along way to Inspiring people
@GilgameshEthics lol. Rural areas contribute almost nothing for the cost to remain, preserve, and taking care of these valuable items. Nothing is for free.
The pause at the end was so long, I thought you weren't going to say your closing line. So glad you're uploading, again! This has always been one of my favorite TH-cam channels
I was just at the field museum doing research in their vert paleo collections and somehow we got on to the topic of your show, they had such nice things to say about you! Im so glad you see your videos in my feed again!
This is incredibly! I'm a UK Egyptology MA student and was recently visited Chicago - Sadly, I didn't know about this museum, but I did drag my friends around the Egyptian section of the Field Museum I also used Dr. Teeter's book "Religion and Ritual in Ancient Egypt" for my undergrad dissertation and will be doing a book review of it in preparation for my MA dissertation. It's lovely seeing her knowledge and personality. As for the cat mummies, yeah, I believe most were shipped to Liverpool. I was lucky enough to be shown around the store rooms of the Liverpool World Museum by it's Egyptology Curator and got to hold one of the cat mummies that were saved. He also showed us a print of a newspaper from that time, showing that many people were outraged by it.
Anybody with a cat knows without watching the video. Because they are worthy of being worshipped. Say what you want about cats or dogs or whatever animal, but i have MASSIVE respect for the personality of a cat. They are much like humans with their sense of independence and worthiness.
You're an excellent interviewer. As someone who often gets, uh, not great questions when asked about his museum job, I appreciate your ability to ask excellent questions.
Also shout out to the ISAC's own channel! All of the talks they publish are a delight of well presented archaeological science. It's. All. So. Good. One of my favourites was on urban gentrification, in mesopotamia... The science of trace residues in pots and all that is wild.
I'm glad the ethical view point of these collections was raised at the end. I was thinking about it when the 180000 cat mummies was discussed. Yes, it's a lot! And the British just decided they were theirs to turn into fertiliser.
love a new brain scoop vid. between you leaving and returning, I started doing volunteer animal keeping and specimen prep at PNNM (yes, I have one role with live animals and one with dead ones) and I've thought about your stuff so often since being part of the museum world! really glad you're back. I haven't been to ISAC yet, but I've been meaning to visit. the 180,000 cat mummies bit was truly baffling (and irritating). also, I can't wait to see you do some rat taxidermy!
I am so incredibly and undeniable elated this channel is back to posting. Thank you Emily for delving into this and sharing this part of Chicagi with us! ❤
I'm happy that you're posting again! That said, since you truncated the intro "jingle"; would you mind returning to the non-distorted sound of yesteryear by any chance? Have a nice one
I remember when fidget spinners were still a thing, the ISAC had to make a new label for one of their objects that said something like "THIS IS NOT A FIDGET SPINNER"
Hey, Emily. I’ve been a fan of the show since I started watching it in high school, so glad you’re back. Also glad to be a Chicago native now. Been living here almost two years and loving it so far!
I will probably be thinking about those 180,000 cat mummies turned into something so ignoble as the fertilizer for another country's crops for the rest of my life. Somehow it's easier for me to comprehend mummies being turned into paint or being used as parlor entertainment in unwrapping ceremonies rather than... fertilizer. I wonder what the ancient Egyptians themselves would think about it? It does tie a bit into the idea of the cycle of death and rebirth. But I also can't help but feel they'd be less offended if it'd been at least within the boundaries of their own civilization, not a far away foreign one that did not respect them. (Great! Now I'm wondering what THEY would think of paint and unwrapping ceremonies and whether they'd prefer the fertilizer option!) I wish I'd put more hours into my Egyptology fascination. I'm a filthy casual, so my guesses aren't even very educated.
@@nunyabiznes33 Underneath the text box there should be an emoji you can click. It'll open a box that has TH-cam-specific emojis along with the standard ones. (The emoji I used here looks roughly the same size as any other emoji to me, though!)
Speaking of the importance and the...everyday relevance of museums: I once tried to count the number of museums I could find on the map in Tokyo. I started with the Shibuya area. I got up to a dozen or so and gave up. A dozen! Just in one not-so-huge part of Tokyo? I love this. Recently, I went to a museum over-looking the bottom of Shibuya valley ('Shibuya' means 'red valley' for the wildflowers that used to proliferate there), in a quiet neighborhood about 10 minutes from the center. It was lovely. Emile Galle, the glasswork artist. It's great when there are so many museums of so many types within a very convenient area. We all probably need more museums in our life.
I went back into my block of flats to rescue my cat while the fire brigade broke into the bottom flat which was on fire. So not just the ancient egyptians.
All of this was great - I feel like I really learned a lot and I've been really interested in the ethical questions around museums, particularly ones that have things that are removed from the cultures that created the artifacts that are on display
It's a REALLY complicated subject that's difficult to address in a short interview. Totally get where you're coming from with wanting answers, but I had to take 3 semesters of museum studies classes focused on reparations, provenance issues, and the antiquities black market to get even a mid-level comprehension of how difficult it is even when museums are 100% on board with returning stuff. (I obviously can't speak for the whole museum/the specific museum staff, This is just my own understanding from courses taught by a professor who has artifacts from her research in the ISAC.)
@@NinaDmytraczenko exactly. We have all this experience with "your' artifacts and so many more people can see it here. If you peasants had it, you don't know how to take care of it and no one would get to see it.
Thank you for mentioning the former name of the ISAC. It is important we not only remember history in general, but also the history of our institutions of public memory
What a cool video, I love Ancient Egypt and its cats. The Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures Museum is also a museum I would love to visit!
3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3
When the lady is “horrified” by the Egyptians wringing the necks of kittens. Imagine when you lived in a country before spaying animals. (Cats or Dogs) Cats can have 3 litters of 4-6 kittens. Those kittens start reproducing at 6-8 months…. 😿(In the old days the kittens were killed to keep the population under control) Cats can completely over run your house or town in a year or two. Thank goodness for medical neutering👏🏼😻
the problem of colonialism goes deeper than just working with the local authority, becuse sometimes the local authority is complicit. i know poeple first hand who had to leave a village where their family had lived for generations because their they were living ontop of a place where the government wanted a digsite. jeah they were relocated to more modern housing but they were still forcibly moved and a lot of living history was killed in the process
I feel privileged having worked at the Field on one of their "living exhibits"; one that showcases a contemporary/ongoing feature of Chicago, and how it served as a model for one way museums can work with their surrounding communities to center their voices or showcase an ongoing need. I think another one at the field, Native Truths, is a good first step into showing what that could look like when you're balancing ancient objects with actively colonized contemporary cultures. I want to know what this could look like moving forward with museums like ISAC. I'd love to see an exhibit ON colonization, done in tandem with the communities that the institution has historically pilfered. Bringing that conversation right to the front and involving the public, something like that
so did the Egyptians have cat goddesses which LED to them having cats in high esteem? or did they hold cats in high esteem first and thus deify them into cat goddesses Sekhmet and Bastet?
@@thebrainscoop yeah 👍🏼 might explain their obsession with cats? From a brief search, it looks like it's well documented in modern Egyptian felines. It's a current issue in modern Egypt due to the warm dry climate. No one has yet investigated its presence in Egyptian mummified cats it seems. Perhaps the ability to detect such old DNA isn't quite there? Surely someone will when we and if we can. I hope. At least to rule it out. Could be an objective window into the behaviour of the ancient Egyptians. Turns out Cleopatra was a crazy cat lady 😜
This is a wonderful museum I had the pleasure to visit back in 2015 I believe it was. It's mind boggling the artifacts they have in there. Chicago is a wonderful city for museums of all different sorts.
For me is obvious, they kill snakes and scorpions, cats are amazing at this. We don´t know this anymore because we have less snakes around, but if you search youtube you can see how fast and incredible they are at killing snakes, even young cats.
There have been lots of studies on cats and their owners IQ and morality. The more a culture likes cats the lower the IQ and the lower their sense of morality. The rise of cat ladies is literally making our society dumber.
big thanks! amazing and as cute as this, its a little sad to know that most of the direct cultural inheritors of these artifacts will never get to see these 350,000 precious objects. it's wishful thinking, but if only these countries that unethically but "legally" retain "ownership" someday allow easier cultural access. they discussed it somewhat near the end, but not all cat lovers can become academics just to access these.
Happy 35th Birthday Emily. I wish everyone a happiest of birthday's and also I believe that no matter what age we turn in 2024 that everyone should celebrate it in any way that they want to and have it with friends and family.
As an Egyptian American, I'm always saying one of the main things I've taken from my ancestors is my worship of cats. Love that there's a video particular on this!
I have loved cats since I was 1 or 2 years old, I was lucky we had crystal kitty who just kinda snuggle with me. They are evolutionary OP in intrigue and sheer cuddly sleep cuteness. She got kitty cancer and died while I was still very little and have only scraps of images of her in my memory, she was an all white kitty. This may sound incredibly panzy but hell the Egyptians worshipped these rodent repellants.
You're right, I will see it as a cult offering, and seems like they seeing death like happy moment when you gonna be happy live near the god of Feline, but is it true ? Is the cat really happy? Is the god happy ? Is there a moment where the god happy by the offering and give them richness in food or anything? It's actually scary for me but I respect their old tradition, it's just bit different in India where the cows live happily treated with respect in India, they do not kill the cows, they treat the cow well
Because they're the one who make effort, spend tons of time and money to discover and study to understand it. So they deserve to keep it. Why do you expect "the lazy one" to get everything without doing anything?
The nation they came from don't deserve it. That nation doesn't even care to take care of what left in their own place and don't even bother to study it.
Read about them before blurting out accusations. The artifacts are on loan to the museum. They have also been active in collecting and repatriating artifacts. Study before you speak.
Great information, Emily. Thank you! Going a little further, and to provide some balance and perspective, how about an episode on the introduction of the domestic feline to North America and the downstream ecological effects to this day of that event? Thank you.
Thank you for this... my assholes (cats) I would run into a burning building to save them. I wouldn't do that for a person. Also wondering how 99% of the stuff shown in the video was painted back in the day. Would so love to have some plaster reproductions and a decent guide to be able to color match ancient Egyptian pigments to paint them.
Boils down to: One idiot thought killing cats would appease the gods, and every Egyptian after that did not have the free will to think with their own mind so continued the murderous spree
Hmmm she really didn’t talk much about how they were worshipped and I wish she got into that more. I came to this video to see how the Egyptians worshipped cats, and instead got traumatized. lol
watching this with my cat rn
this video sponsored by Toxoplasmosis
So??? Did the cat like it?
😂😂@@thebrainscoop
@@thebrainscoopI’m sorry but I just don’t find how that comment is remotely funny.
@@sforza209 No one is sorry that you lack a sense of humor, your loss alone
Cats in Ancient Egypt were also extremely valued for keeping rats from their vital grain supplies. They stored grains for the off season and cats were a main defence of their food supplies
They can also sense when a storm or earthquake is coming which would make them the original ADT security. They start to run, you run😂
they kill snakes and scorpions, cats are super fast and incredible at killing snakes.
Cats can see different dimensions
I think it boils down to 2 big reasons: First, cats have basically saved human agriculture in the past by killing pests. Humans probably saw how efficient they were at killing and revered that. Second, cats are very obviously miniature versions of tigers and lions. Two animals that hold high symbolic significance in many cultures. I wouldn't be surprised if ancient people connecting cats to apex predators was a big part of it.
Most logical answer so far
And you forgot the most important point. They’re incredibly cute 😂
Bland mofos reducing to simple 💩 #learntolisten
They weren't big on dogs, which is why their civilization collapsed and ours is still going strong 💪
And of course there is a third reason. Animals where a huge part of their pantheon as with many old religions. The spirit of their gods manifest in animals or so they thought. If you had a cat in your household, you were protected by that god. Sekhmet in this case.
The poor research assistant in the back grinding away just trying to get their PHD.
🤣
That's me 😁 I was studying some 9000 BC stone tools from a site called M'lefaat.
Inshallah I will get my PhD!
soon they too will be interviewed by Emily
Inshallah @@JosephHarrisArch
Good luck on your phd!!
'In ancient times cats were worshipped as gods; they have not forgotten this.'
-Terry Pratchett.
It's stored in their DNA. 😉
“I meant," said Ipslore bitterly, "what is there in this world that truly makes living worthwhile?" Death thought about it. CATS, he said eventually. CATS ARE NICE.”
― Terry Pratchett, Sourcery
“If cats looked like frogs we'd realize what nasty, cruel little bastards they are. Style. That's what people remember.”
― Terry Pratchett, Lords and Ladies
@@alisonmoffat9682But they're fluffy and cuddly
All hail King Greebo of Lancre.
I love being in museum back-rooms because they're one of the few places outside of Goldilocks that you have the opportunity try several different variety of chairs without ever leaving the same table
Thank you for reminding me of the novelty tumblr I made between 2016 - 2017: www.tumblr.com/fieldmuseumchairs
@@thebrainscoop omg thank you for this
@@thebrainscoopwhat a beautiful collection.
Future internet archaeologists: "The people of the 2000s were obsessed with cats. There were cats all over TH-cam"
Future archealogist might even not be able to study TH-cam, but the Egyptian cats will still be there.
Studies show that watching cat videos can reduce your risk of stress-related illnesses. That's the only reason why I watch these videos on TH-cam.
And they would be correct.
❤❤❤❤❤🐈🐈🐈🐈♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️ 🐈🐈🐈🐈♥️♥️♥️ (supporting your theory!)
We’ll have Youtubologists one day. I’m taking applications to train them.
Why are people obsessed with cats? THEY ARE CATS!❤️ What other reason is needed 😂
it's actually because of the toxoplasmosis.
@@handlesshouldntdefaulttonamesif you like the smell of your cat's urine and feces, it's toxiplasmosis. If you don't, it's love.
@@therabbithat thanks for answering my question for me!
It always baffles me when museum only can show something like 2% or less of their collection and it's already so much on display and then you check their reserve and it's even more mind-blowing.
They should open up more branches in rural places with the "b-rate" items. Most people in rural America don't have any access to museums. It would go along way to Inspiring people
Only certain ppl allowed to see n investigate most of history
Or knowledge, for that matter
Only for me and not for thee…the unwashed masses
@GilgameshEthics lol. Rural areas contribute almost nothing for the cost to remain, preserve, and taking care of these valuable items. Nothing is for free.
@GilgameshEthics Those rural people can fly to the cities to go to museums, or go to library to study it. City people owe them nothing.
@@adw6894everyone is entitled to culture why are you gatekeeping
I love the enthusiasm of professionals in their topics of study! "Catacombs"!!
The pause at the end was so long, I thought you weren't going to say your closing line. So glad you're uploading, again! This has always been one of my favorite TH-cam channels
I was just at the field museum doing research in their vert paleo collections and somehow we got on to the topic of your show, they had such nice things to say about you! Im so glad you see your videos in my feed again!
Awww, this makes me so happy 🥹🥹
This is incredibly!
I'm a UK Egyptology MA student and was recently visited Chicago - Sadly, I didn't know about this museum, but I did drag my friends around the Egyptian section of the Field Museum
I also used Dr. Teeter's book "Religion and Ritual in Ancient Egypt" for my undergrad dissertation and will be doing a book review of it in preparation for my MA dissertation. It's lovely seeing her knowledge and personality.
As for the cat mummies, yeah, I believe most were shipped to Liverpool. I was lucky enough to be shown around the store rooms of the Liverpool World Museum by it's Egyptology Curator and got to hold one of the cat mummies that were saved. He also showed us a print of a newspaper from that time, showing that many people were outraged by it.
Anybody with a cat knows without watching the video. Because they are worthy of being worshipped. Say what you want about cats or dogs or whatever animal, but i have MASSIVE respect for the personality of a cat. They are much like humans with their sense of independence and worthiness.
They say in this video at 7:30 that they would grow those cat farms and then ring 3 month old kitten necks to sacrifice them 😢
@jnzk6467 sadly humans have done the same to every animal and even humans 😢
meow
You're an excellent interviewer. As someone who often gets, uh, not great questions when asked about his museum job, I appreciate your ability to ask excellent questions.
The catacombs got me good. Excellent pun use.
Also shout out to the ISAC's own channel! All of the talks they publish are a delight of well presented archaeological science. It's. All. So. Good.
One of my favourites was on urban gentrification, in mesopotamia... The science of trace residues in pots and all that is wild.
I'm glad the ethical view point of these collections was raised at the end. I was thinking about it when the 180000 cat mummies was discussed. Yes, it's a lot! And the British just decided they were theirs to turn into fertiliser.
They also turned tons of mummies into quack medicine or artist paint or as curios for "unwrapping" parties
love a new brain scoop vid. between you leaving and returning, I started doing volunteer animal keeping and specimen prep at PNNM (yes, I have one role with live animals and one with dead ones) and I've thought about your stuff so often since being part of the museum world! really glad you're back.
I haven't been to ISAC yet, but I've been meaning to visit. the 180,000 cat mummies bit was truly baffling (and irritating). also, I can't wait to see you do some rat taxidermy!
Finding out that Cat Urine deters rodents, it makes sense that Egypt (famous grain basket of the ancient world) would LOVE cats.
I am so incredibly and undeniable elated this channel is back to posting. Thank you Emily for delving into this and sharing this part of Chicagi with us! ❤
I'm happy that you're posting again! That said, since you truncated the intro "jingle"; would you mind returning to the non-distorted sound of yesteryear by any chance? Have a nice one
noted! 🫡
That time period is absolutely my jam! New museum visit goal for a Chicago trip!
I remember when fidget spinners were still a thing, the ISAC had to make a new label for one of their objects that said something like "THIS IS NOT A FIDGET SPINNER"
Now I have to know what that object was!
Linus Tech Tips makes a $60 figet spinner that you can use as a screwdriver.
Hey, Emily. I’ve been a fan of the show since I started watching it in high school, so glad you’re back.
Also glad to be a Chicago native now. Been living here almost two years and loving it so far!
So glad to have you back both for how much I can learn but also for the 'it's still got brains on it' fun throwback 💜💜💜
I will probably be thinking about those 180,000 cat mummies turned into something so ignoble as the fertilizer for another country's crops for the rest of my life. Somehow it's easier for me to comprehend mummies being turned into paint or being used as parlor entertainment in unwrapping ceremonies rather than... fertilizer.
I wonder what the ancient Egyptians themselves would think about it? It does tie a bit into the idea of the cycle of death and rebirth. But I also can't help but feel they'd be less offended if it'd been at least within the boundaries of their own civilization, not a far away foreign one that did not respect them. (Great! Now I'm wondering what THEY would think of paint and unwrapping ceremonies and whether they'd prefer the fertilizer option!)
I wish I'd put more hours into my Egyptology fascination. I'm a filthy casual, so my guesses aren't even very educated.
How are you using those large emojis?
@@nunyabiznes33 Underneath the text box there should be an emoji you can click. It'll open a box that has TH-cam-specific emojis along with the standard ones. (The emoji I used here looks roughly the same size as any other emoji to me, though!)
Speaking of the importance and the...everyday relevance of museums: I once tried to count the number of museums I could find on the map in Tokyo. I started with the Shibuya area. I got up to a dozen or so and gave up. A dozen! Just in one not-so-huge part of Tokyo?
I love this. Recently, I went to a museum over-looking the bottom of Shibuya valley ('Shibuya' means 'red valley' for the wildflowers that used to proliferate there), in a quiet neighborhood about 10 minutes from the center. It was lovely. Emile Galle, the glasswork artist.
It's great when there are so many museums of so many types within a very convenient area.
We all probably need more museums in our life.
I went back into my block of flats to rescue my cat while the fire brigade broke into the bottom flat which was on fire. So not just the ancient egyptians.
That facial expression of yours after the pun was really funny. It made me smile. That is the face I try to get from people when I tell them puns.
All of this was great - I feel like I really learned a lot and I've been really interested in the ethical questions around museums, particularly ones that have things that are removed from the cultures that created the artifacts that are on display
You reminded me that I went to this museum 9(!) years ago this very weekend! Such a hidden gem!
What a beautiful mix between Glenn Close and Jodi Foster ❤
I love those clips at the end of the whole Brain Scoop team with cats!
The museum curator side stepped the question of giving objects back pretty well...
It's a REALLY complicated subject that's difficult to address in a short interview. Totally get where you're coming from with wanting answers, but I had to take 3 semesters of museum studies classes focused on reparations, provenance issues, and the antiquities black market to get even a mid-level comprehension of how difficult it is even when museums are 100% on board with returning stuff.
(I obviously can't speak for the whole museum/the specific museum staff, This is just my own understanding from courses taught by a professor who has artifacts from her research in the ISAC.)
I love you for this answer 🙏🏻
Oh, I noticed. "We need to train people in long term conservation"? 🤨 What a conveniently colonial answer to the question...
@@NinaDmytraczenko So you want uneducated people to destroy them?
@@NinaDmytraczenko exactly. We have all this experience with "your' artifacts and so many more people can see it here. If you peasants had it, you don't know how to take care of it and no one would get to see it.
The Egyptologist seems really nice and friendly, what an insightful talk! ❤️
Thank you for mentioning the former name of the ISAC. It is important we not only remember history in general, but also the history of our institutions of public memory
Thanks! I didn't know you could add a bonus! Yay!
I had no idea this was a thing either 👁️👄👁️
Thank you 🥹
What a cool video, I love Ancient Egypt and its cats. The Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures Museum is also a museum I would love to visit!
When the lady is “horrified” by the Egyptians wringing the necks of kittens.
Imagine when you lived in a country before spaying animals. (Cats or Dogs)
Cats can have 3 litters of 4-6 kittens. Those kittens start reproducing at 6-8 months….
😿(In the old days the kittens were killed to keep the population under control)
Cats can completely over run your house or town in a year or two.
Thank goodness for medical neutering👏🏼😻
remember, the video is not over until "It still has brains on it"
I was just there a couple of weeks ago and loved it!
I'm obsessed with ISAC! They have an amazing Mesopotamian collection
They really do!! Every time I go, I see something new. And I can’t believe it’s FREE, we don’t have enough of those here in the states
Dr. Findlay of the British Museum gives some of the best talks on Mesopotamia on You Tube
I was lucky enough to take an archaeology class in ISAC (in the basement) when I was in undergrad. thanks so much for the fun reminder of that time!
Museum in my childhood home Chicago, ancient Egypt, and cats...I am glad I clicked on this video🙏🐈💕
the problem of colonialism goes deeper than just working with the local authority, becuse sometimes the local authority is complicit.
i know poeple first hand who had to leave a village where their family had lived for generations because their they were living ontop of a place where the government wanted a digsite.
jeah they were relocated to more modern housing but they were still forcibly moved and a lot of living history was killed in the process
I feel privileged having worked at the Field on one of their "living exhibits"; one that showcases a contemporary/ongoing feature of Chicago, and how it served as a model for one way museums can work with their surrounding communities to center their voices or showcase an ongoing need. I think another one at the field, Native Truths, is a good first step into showing what that could look like when you're balancing ancient objects with actively colonized contemporary cultures.
I want to know what this could look like moving forward with museums like ISAC. I'd love to see an exhibit ON colonization, done in tandem with the communities that the institution has historically pilfered. Bringing that conversation right to the front and involving the public, something like that
Thank you for creating and sharing this!
Im literally watching this while taxidermeying a bird after getting inspired by some of you vids❤❤😅❤
so did the Egyptians have cat goddesses which LED to them having cats in high esteem? or did they hold cats in high esteem first and thus deify them into cat goddesses Sekhmet and Bastet?
Emily! You are back!!!
I don't think killing thousand of cats as sacrifices counts as "loving cats."
😂 right?!?
Has anyone ever tested these mummified cats for Toxoplasmosis Gondii DNA?
I’m not sure but that’s a fun idea
@@thebrainscoop yeah 👍🏼 might explain their obsession with cats? From a brief search, it looks like it's well documented in modern Egyptian felines. It's a current issue in modern Egypt due to the warm dry climate.
No one has yet investigated its presence in Egyptian mummified cats it seems. Perhaps the ability to detect such old DNA isn't quite there? Surely someone will when we and if we can. I hope. At least to rule it out.
Could be an objective window into the behaviour of the ancient Egyptians. Turns out Cleopatra was a crazy cat lady 😜
Ooh!! You are back!
This is a wonderful museum I had the pleasure to visit back in 2015 I believe it was. It's mind boggling the artifacts they have in there.
Chicago is a wonderful city for museums of all different sorts.
Great show Emily! Looking forward to seeing more
Brandon's "cat" 😆A purrfect episode!
CATACOMBS
oh lord I laughed way too hard she was so proud of that
For me is obvious, they kill snakes and scorpions, cats are amazing at this. We don´t know this anymore because we have less snakes around, but if you search youtube you can see how fast and incredible they are at killing snakes, even young cats.
I"ve been to this museum when it was called The Oriental Museum. The word oriental meant the Near East 100 years ago. Great museum, whatever the name.
I went there a few times years and years ago, but I remember it as The Oriental Institute.
Gotta say it.. I'm disappointed at the ancient Egyptians for scarificing cats, i had them down as the best cat parents in history but i guess not 😒😅
There have been lots of studies on cats and their owners IQ and morality. The more a culture likes cats the lower the IQ and the lower their sense of morality. The rise of cat ladies is literally making our society dumber.
@@charlesg5085 and where is there references?
big thanks! amazing and as cute as this, its a little sad to know that most of the direct cultural inheritors of these artifacts will never get to see these 350,000 precious objects. it's wishful thinking, but if only these countries that unethically but "legally" retain "ownership" someday allow easier cultural access. they discussed it somewhat near the end, but not all cat lovers can become academics just to access these.
13:43 Whoa, what a big cat!
Fascinating - thank you for this- cats are indeed amazing creatures
13:44 that’s so cuteee. Her kitty ears
I really like how history of people just makes humanity more interesting.
Great video! Simple, to the point, love it. Just miss the taxidermy videos.....
Well boy are you gonna love the next one…!
Just found your channel and I love these videos!
Brandon has the biggest cat I've ever seen! What is he feeding it?!
kittens, apparently
Poor cat mummies who became fertilizer in England. The curse of Bastet will haunt England.
There are so many nice free museums on that campus ❤
Wow! Emily and ISAC, on the same video? We're too blessed
Fantastic. Great job, thebrainscoop.
My refrigerator magnet says, "YOU'RE NOT MY CAT! YOU CAN'T TELL ME WHAT TO DO." He rules.
Excellent episode.
This was such an interesting and entertaining video! If you need anything in Rome let me know!
Happy 35th Birthday Emily. I wish everyone a happiest of birthday's and also I believe that no matter what age we turn in 2024 that everyone should celebrate it in any way that they want to and have it with friends and family.
As an Egyptian American, I'm always saying one of the main things I've taken from my ancestors is my worship of cats. Love that there's a video particular on this!
Your ancestors invaded Africa during the 7th century AD and ushered in Islam. Pre-Islamic cultures never worshipped cats
I have loved cats since I was 1 or 2 years old, I was lucky we had crystal kitty who just kinda snuggle with me. They are evolutionary OP in intrigue and sheer cuddly sleep cuteness. She got kitty cancer and died while I was still very little and have only scraps of images of her in my memory, she was an all white kitty. This may sound incredibly panzy but hell the Egyptians worshipped these rodent repellants.
I deeply appreciate how at the beginning of every episode I get kissed by a raccoon. And isn't that what the brain scoop is all about?
I am not an Egyptologist by any standard, but I have never, ever heard of Ra being pronounced "ray". Say what??
Ra is the root word to ray. Ra is the sun and ray is sunlight.
Ra, Rey, Atum, Amun, they called God different names depending upon the period. Ra was the oldest and most widely used name.
If I were a diety that was associated with an animal, I would be p-ssed if anyone culled or harmed that animal.
You're right, I will see it as a cult offering, and seems like they seeing death like happy moment when you gonna be happy live near the god of Feline, but is it true ? Is the cat really happy? Is the god happy ? Is there a moment where the god happy by the offering and give them richness in food or anything? It's actually scary for me but I respect their old tradition, it's just bit different in India where the cows live happily treated with respect in India, they do not kill the cows, they treat the cow well
so WHAT IS THAT MUSEUM DOING WITH THOSE ARTIFACTS ??????? WHICH SHOULD BE IN THE MUSEUMS OF THE NATIONS THEY CAME FROM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Get over it.
Money. That's why.
Because they're the one who make effort, spend tons of time and money to discover and study to understand it. So they deserve to keep it. Why do you expect "the lazy one" to get everything without doing anything?
The nation they came from don't deserve it. That nation doesn't even care to take care of what left in their own place and don't even bother to study it.
Read about them before blurting out accusations. The artifacts are on loan to the museum. They have also been active in collecting and repatriating artifacts. Study before you speak.
So we’ve had the rat video and the cat video. Clearly bats are next, followed by a pivot to hats and vats.
And mats.
..it was a necessity...the ancient Egyptians stored a lot of grain so they either had cats or rats...
I love cats and my cats 😺❤❤❤❤ their purring has healing abilities 😊
I love the museum and Cats !
mew mew is my kitty's name
my 4th cat will be named that
Great information, Emily. Thank you! Going a little further, and to provide some balance and perspective, how about an episode on the introduction of the domestic feline to North America and the downstream ecological effects to this day of that event? Thank you.
I can't tell if you're talking in front of a still image "background" or what for most of the video, the echos kept throwing me off ^^;
Did I just hear that Egyptians who worshiped cats use to sacrifice them too? That was not what I’d expect to hear
Right?? Makes no sense and I could have done without knowing that. I thought killing cats was a crime back then? Seems hypocritical to me.
@@misscrankypantssDifferent cultures, ya know. Moreover, there was probably a significant difference between sacrifice and killing.
Thank you for this... my assholes (cats) I would run into a burning building to save them. I wouldn't do that for a person.
Also wondering how 99% of the stuff shown in the video was painted back in the day. Would so love to have some plaster reproductions and a decent guide to be able to color match ancient Egyptian pigments to paint them.
Cat purring can mend broken bones and can soothe nerves and help muscles heal.
Boils down to: One idiot thought killing cats would appease the gods, and every Egyptian after that did not have the free will to think with their own mind so continued the murderous spree
My Bugsy just passed, and I’m absolutely in line with worshiping cats. If i had the capacity to mummify my cat, I would for sure
We cat people love cats no matter what. They are our gods ❤
when the grain is life, the protectors of the grain must seem like angels
Ughhhhh cats, I could die from cuteness. So good!
Hmmm she really didn’t talk much about how they were worshipped and I wish she got into that more. I came to this video to see how the Egyptians worshipped cats, and instead got traumatized. lol
Right? Geez
Ancient Egyptians? We still love'em 😻
I went to the museum back in the 90's. It was great back then I should visit again. Mew!🐱