Bast

variant
spelling: Bastet
Bast
(or Bastet) was originally a lion goddess, but over the years as her
cult developed she became more associated with the cat and was considered
to be the gentler counterpart of the lion goddess Sekhmet. Cats were
much loved by the Egyptians. Illustrations on papyrus show them sitting
beneath chairs waiting for treats from the feast table, and appearing
in hunting scenes where they assist their masters, having being trained
to retrieve birds brought down from the sky by a throwing stick.Cats
could be observed skillfully hunting and catching snakes, which had
special relevance for the Egyptians in that in addition to being dangerous
to man the snake was the symbol of Apophis, the demonic enemy of the
sun god Ra. So cats became animals sacred to the solar deity, and in
the markings upon cats' heads the Egyptians saw an image of the scarab
beetle, symbol of the rising sun. Also the eyes of the cat were seen
to change with movement of the sun. When the sun was at its strongest
cats' eyes would be almost completely golden, but when the sun set and
darkness fell their pupils would open and the eyes too would become
as black as the night sky.Figures of cats were offered to Bast by her
followers to win her favour and thousands of mummified cats were buried
in the special cemeteries of Bubastis, 'house of Bast'.As a sun goddess
Bast was the goddess of plenty and the mistress of pleasure. In other
myths Bast is associated with the moon rather than the sun and is referred
to as the eye of the moon, the twin of Horus or the eye of the sun.
Her popularity extended through the Greek period and the Romans took
her cult to Europe, where she was worshipped in various places, Rome
and Pompeii amongst them.