It is believed that all modern cat species hailed from one ancestor – the Middle Eastern Wildcat, Felis Sylvestris. Researchers largely based this theory on their similar skeletal structures.
However, more evidence emerged on the origin of cats when a study published in 2007 analysed the DNA of different wildcats from various regions and compared them to domesticated cats. Interestingly, they discovered that the DNA of the African Wildcat correlated with both purebred (yes, even the elegant Ragdoll or Siamese) and mixed breed moggies, which adds weight to the common-ancestor theory.
When were cats first domesticated?
When it comes to the history of cats, it’s quite hard to pin down when they were first domesticated. This is largely due to the previously mentioned fact of their remarkably similar skeletons.
It wasn’t until 1983 that we even had the first inkling of cat domestication, when a cat jawbone was located in Cyprus during an archaeological dig and they estimated that domestication had occurred 8,000 years ago. Researchers thought this cat must have been domesticated because the only way a cat could have got to the island was via a ship with humans, and it was incredibly unlikely that they would have been able to bring cats which were completely wild along with them.
Further research in 2004 set the origin of cat domestication back even further as according to The Smithsonian, a cat was found purposefully buried with a human, which was thought to be 9,500 years old.
Since then, another study was done in 2017 at the University of Leuven. This research analysed the DNA from 200 cats found in archaeological sites in the Near East, Africa and Europe. The ages of these discoveries ranged between 100 to 9,000 years ago with some suggested as aged up to 12,000 years old.
The Smithsonian also states some researchers believe that the initial domestication process began with the very first agricultural settlements around 12,000 years ago in the Fertile Crescent (located in the Middle East). Historians have proposed that as people began to grow crops and use grain stores, this attracted mice and rats, and with the abundance of prey came the wild cats. It’s likely that people recognised the great benefits of pest control, so they allowed these cats to stay, which eventually led to them living in their homes and becoming their companions.
Domestic cats and wild cats