Around 10,000 years ago, as farming villages spread across the Fertile Crescent, a small wild cat began haunting the edges of human settlement. Granaries drew rodents. Rodents drew cats. And something unexpected happened: people let them stay. A burial site on the island of Cyprus, dating to roughly 8,000 B.C.E., offers one of the earliest and most striking pieces of evidence that this relationship had already grown into something more than convenience.
What the evidence shows
- Cat domestication: A human and a cat were found buried together in a grave at Shillourokambos, Cyprus, dating to approximately 7,500–8,000 B.C.E., suggesting the animals held enough social significance to accompany people in death.
- Wildcat ancestry: Genetic studies confirm that all domestic cats descend from the Near Eastern wildcat Felis silvestris lybica, which lived across the Fertile Crescent — the same region where early agriculture took root.
- Island presence: Because Cyprus has no native wildcats, the animals found there must have been transported by boat, indicating that humans were deliberately bringing cats with them as early farming communities expanded.
A relationship that neither side fully planned
Cat domestication looks different from almost every other animal we brought into human life. Dogs were shaped over tens of thousands of years into helpers — hunters, herders, guardians. Cattle, pigs, and chickens were selectively bred for food. Cats, by contrast, largely domesticated themselves, according to researchers who have studied the genetics and archaeology of the process.
The mechanism was mutualism. Early agricultural villages in the Levant, Anatolia, and surrounding regions stored surplus grain — a revolutionary development that also created a concentrated food supply for mice and rats. Wildcats that were bold enough to approach human settlements found easy prey. Humans who tolerated those cats found their stores better protected.
Over generations, the cats that fared best near people were those less prone to fear and flight. Natural selection, not deliberate human breeding, nudged the population toward tameness. The genetic signature of this process, identified in large-scale DNA studies published in the journal Nature Ecology and Evolution, shows that domestic cats retain far more of their wildcat genome than dogs retain of their wolf ancestry — a reflection of how shallow and recent the domestication was.
Why Cyprus matters
The island changes the story in an important way. Cyprus sits about 70 kilometers off the coast of modern Turkey. No wildcat population ever lived there naturally. When archaeologists excavating the Neolithic site of Shillourokambos in the early 2000s uncovered a grave containing both human and feline remains, positioned carefully side by side, they faced an immediate question: how did that cat get to the island at all?
The answer is that someone put it on a boat. That single act — carrying a cat across open water — implies something well beyond passive tolerance. It suggests the relationship had become deliberate, valued, and portable. The animal was part of what this community brought with them when they moved.
The Cyprus burial predates Egyptian cat imagery by thousands of years. Ancient Egypt is often credited with elevating the cat to cultural prominence, and Egyptian cats were eventually traded west and east, spreading tame lineages across Europe and Asia. But the Shillourokambos grave suggests that the human-cat bond was already meaningful long before temple walls carried the image of Bastet.
An outlier among domestic animals
What makes cat domestication genuinely unusual is how little it changed the animal. Domestic dogs are morphologically and behaviorally distant from wolves. Domestic cattle bear little resemblance to the extinct aurochs they came from. Domestic cats, by comparison, look and behave remarkably like their wild ancestors. Their social behavior, hunting instincts, and independence remain largely intact.
This is not a failure of domestication. It is a different kind of success. Cats were useful precisely because they were predators, and predators need their edge. The human role was not to reshape the cat — it was to create conditions where the cat’s existing nature served a human purpose.
Researchers have found that even the genetic changes associated with domestication in cats are relatively modest: adjustments in genes related to fear response and the ability to seek out reward from human interaction, but little of the dramatic reshaping seen in other domestic species. The 2017 genetic study published in Nature Ecology and Evolution traced two main waves of cat dispersal — one from the Fertile Crescent following farming communities, and a second from Egypt spreading along trade routes — both driven largely by human movement rather than human breeding programs.
Lasting impact
The cat-human relationship that began in Neolithic farming villages now encompasses an estimated 600 million domestic cats worldwide. They are the most numerous carnivorous mammal on Earth after humans themselves. In practical terms, their role in controlling rodent populations around stored food almost certainly contributed to the viability of early agricultural surpluses — a contribution that helped sustain the population growth that made cities, writing, and everything that followed possible.
Culturally, cats have threaded through human civilization on every inhabited continent they reached. Ancient Egyptians elevated them to divine status. Norse mythology gave the goddess Freya a chariot pulled by cats. Across East Asia, the beckoning cat became a symbol of good fortune. These traditions emerged independently in different cultures, but they all reflect the same underlying fact: cats became woven into human life in a way that generated meaning, not just utility.
The Cyprus burial is a small thing — two skeletons in the ground, one human, one feline, separated by 10,000 years from anyone who could explain what they meant to each other. But it is one of the earliest physical records of a bond between humans and another species that was chosen rather than purely imposed, mutual rather than purely instrumental.
Blindspots and limits
The archaeological record for early cat domestication remains sparse, and the Shillourokambos burial cannot tell us whether the cat was a pet, a working animal, a ritual object, or something the Neolithic world had no word for. Dating estimates for the beginning of cat domestication range across several thousand years depending on which evidence is weighted, and ongoing ancient DNA analysis continues to revise the picture. The cats that followed human civilization also carried costs: as invasive predators, feral and domestic cats have contributed to the extinction and decline of bird and small mammal populations on islands and in vulnerable ecosystems — a shadow that follows even the warmest telling of this story.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Ars Technica — Cats are an extreme outlier among domestic animals
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana establishes a new marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Uganda reintroduces rhinos to Kidepo Valley
- The Good News for Humankind archive on prehistory
About this article
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