Vikings were hardy people who valued self-reliance and strength of will. But that doesn’t mean they were immune to the lure of feline companionship. A new study on cat DNA and linage shows that as well as ruling in Egypt and the Mediterranean, cats were welcomed aboard Viking ships.
In the new study, samples were taken the remains of cats that date to as recently as the 18th century and as far back as the early Stone Age, around 8,900 to 3,900 years ago, when Europeans had not yet adopted farming and still led a hunter-gatherer lifestyle.
Scientists distinguished two distinct waves of growth of domestic cat populations: the first one occurred around 10,000 years ago when humans first started cultivating crops, and second one happened when mankind took to the seas. Cats were first approached by mankind around 12,000 years ago amid the dawn of agriculture in the Fertile Crescent. Some 6,000 years ago, cats may have been tamed by Ancient Egyptians — only to be mummified by the millions by later dynasties. The same DNA lineage was later found in ancient cat remains in Bulgaria, Turkey and sub-Saharan Africa from the end of the fourth century BC through the fourth century AD.
The initial rise in domestic cat populations was based on agricultural progress. Granaries drew hordes of rodents, which subsequently became food for slinky felines. Ancient humans probably welcomed the new arrivals as an effective-yet-lovable means of eradicating mice who were eating away at their crops. A second population explosion seemed to coincide with the advent of boat travel. Again, cats served to protect invaluable victuals from rats and mice that spawned on board. Even Vikings, though infamous for being stern, seaworthy coastal raiders, were not averse to having a kitty on board their longboats, the study showed.
The scientists found cat remains with maternal DNA lineage at a Viking site in northern Germany. “Sea-faring people probably kept cats to keep rodents in check,” Eva-Maria Geigl, an evolutionary geneticist and the Jacques Monod Institute in Paris, told the science journal Nature.
A cat bone dating back to 200 AD was found in a grave with burnt human remains near Kastrup in southern Jutland, Denmark, which suggests that it was used as a symbolic amulet with protective value.
It is highly likely that Scandinavians only picked up on the wide popularity of the domestic cat after they had begun coming into contact with other cultures during Viking Age exploration, such as the British Isles, where cats were already widely used for pest control. Subsequently cats made it to Iceland and even across the ocean to Greenland, which was inhabited by Vikings around the year 1000.
During the Viking age, cats were rare, expensive, and connected with Freyja, the Norse goddess of love, who had a carriage driven by a pair of male cats. Another mythological instance of the cat was used as a camouflage to lure hammer-wielding god of thunder Thor, who was asked to lift giant Utgard-Loki’s cat, which later turned out to be the dreadful Midgard Serpent in disguise.
Agencies/Canadajournal