
Ancient Egyptian cat
Cat Mummies
Asian kitten breed
Cat Organ
Calico cat
One cute Calico kitten
Another one.
Mother of the murdered kittens
Of all the animals that roamed the earth, cats perhaps form the species associated with the most exotic, regal and most number of myths and superstitions. Cats became no less than objects of worship during the time of ancient Egypt, with domesticated cats being accorded the ultimate respect of mummification followed by cemetery burial. In Europe in the Middle Ages, cats suffered three centuries of persecution, including summary killings and torture, borne out of their association with witches and witchcraft. In the 17th century, cats regained public favor when the court under French Cardinal Richelieu began the trend of keeping them.
Today, superstitions such as a black cat crossing the path of a person as bringing bad luck, and myths, such as these feline creatures having nine lives, survive. In Asia, one of the fascinating cat myths has to do with its males or tomcats. The myth concerns the belief that tomcat sporting furs of three colors, and which survive into adulthood, get to reign as "king" (presumably of a territory it is able to roam).
King Tomcat
This cat myth is still told in parts of the Southeast Asian country, the Philippines. Incidentally, the Philippine archipelago, is a former Spanish colony named after King Philip II under whose honor was invented the cat organ, a public musical-cum-torture instrument wherein boxed cats were made to howl (in pain) as their tails tied to an organ keyboard were jerked with the pounding of the keys.
This king tomcat myth has a rather grim component. Supposedly, so that cats (or male cats only ?) would not have to be burdened by the future rule of a king cat, adult male cats kill, nay, murder, all male kittens with three-colored coats. Animal grim and really fantastic-sounding.
A Childhood Myth
I have lived with cats and dogs around since I could remember. Ours was the typical Filipino family that nurtures pets as driven by both utilitarian and companionship perspectives: dogs are bantay (guards) against intruder as cats are against, well, rodents. Amidst this animal-friendly environment, this tomcat story became a fixture in my mind. Well, at least ever since my father and siblings figured I was old enough to comprehend stories.
Even at a young age, such a story sounded like a tall, leaping tale to me. I was perhaps of pre-school age when I began dismissing the tomcat story as incredible--despite the seemingly serious countenance of my father from whom I remember first hearing the oft-told story. How could cats know all that? How could cats know the idea of a king? More incredibly, how could cats know a king based on an outside feature--something like based on one's clothes (or skin color)? In adult terms, what my young mind was basically saying was that such a tomcat story couldn't be true because to believe so would assume that cats have a sophisticated culture that takes care of the process of social order. It assumes that elite cat dominance is based not on the usual "physical might is power" but rather, on a summary selection process that is both racist and sexist.
Of course, as I entered schooling years, I came to "recognize" the story as a superstition, an animal myth. But stories around the tomcat myth persisted. I heard more than once that rich fellows are able to keep three-colored male kittens alive to adulthood by caging or enclosing them as a way to protect their special pets from murderous feline attacks. Convinced that the story is nothing but "superstition," I did not bother with finding out its veracity or otherwise. I soon lived, grew up and matured without giving any further thought to this male cat myth, although I must say that I don't think I have ever seen a tomcat with three-colored fur (supposedly, any color combination) in the neighborhood.
Kitten Murders & the Tomcat King
It would take some three decades later before this tomcat king story would be resuscitated in my mind. One early morning a few years ago, my husband and I went to visit my parents' grave nearby while our kids were still asleep. I remember that I left the backdoor open because we only planned to stay in the cemetery for a short while. Coming back, we were surprised by the sight of one of the newborn kittens of our female cat lying dead on the floor near our old sofa chair.
A few days earlier, our female cat with a three-colored coat had delivered a litter of 4 (or 5?) kittens to nurse, and subsequently brought her babies to the space underneath the sofa through a torn part of the leather upholstery. Fearing the worst, I stooped down to push the torn leather and to check underneath. What I saw was almost something straight from Discovery Channel's features of murder-capable animals such as lions and chimps. All of the kittens--all of which had similar three-color patterns as their mother--were dead and all of them had blood and bite marks on the neck.
It was a ghastly sight, but which jolted the tomcat story out from the deep recesses of my memory. Blurting out the possibility of the truth of a three-colored future cat king, I asked my husband to check out the sex of the dead kittens. He checked out at least three of the four and reported that two were males. Putting two and two together, I remembered a big white tomcat circling around some two days earlier. Oh dear, I cried. So the tomcat story is true!? Cat murder and the feline king tale seemed definitely real at that point. For a time, I blamed myself for forgetting to lock the door through which the "wicked" tomcat probably got in.
Three-Colored Cat is "Calico"
Searching for answers to mystery, I scoured the Internet using <"cat myth" three colored> and , and other combination search words. It was then that I learned that male cats are sometimes capable of murdering kittens they did not sire--much like lions often do. I also learned that cats having furs with three colors are called Calico cats and that Calico tomcats are biologically rare. More than ninety percent of the time, Calico felines are females because fur color is a sex-linked trait, specifically linked to the X chromosome of which female have two while males only have one. Calico males are a rarity and tend to be sterile.
Is the kitten murder solved then? The question is whether the scientific explanation satisfies the incident. Firstly, on account of the culprit suspect tomcat, we can never be sure but the scenario is possible because I did leave the door open for the murder. On account of the Calico kittens, there were at least two males in the litter, with all of the kittens in the litter having three-colored coats.
Cat Myth and Science
Were the kittens murdered by the sex-craving of a tomcat, or because the litter contained future cat kings then? That feline beast possibly did want to mate with my female cat and to make her sexually receptive, conveniently killed her litter without animal remorse. Then again, such seemed a one-in-a-million incident because I'm certain that what happened to those poor three-colored kittens was the first ever case of feline murder in our household (out of the many kitten litters our female cats have given birth through the decades). The set of kittens was also the first case of a pure Calico litter and male Calico we ever had. My husband swears that he checked for the gender and saw at least one--for certain, but perhaps at least two--of the murdered Calico kittens was male. Too much of a coincidence, or a plain coincidence? Did the Calico litter killing spring from murderous sex craving, or from a cat culture humans are unaware of or unwilling to recognize?
I must admit I find it tempting to view this story of the feline murder of the Calico litter as a case of anecdotal evidence for the tomcat king angle, as much as an unfortunate cat story explainable by genetics and a not uncommon behavior among male members of the cat species. To hold on to the tomcat king myth amidst scientific and plausible explanations is, of course, ridiculous. Nonetheless, the myth showcases the fascinating literary creativity and ingenuity of the early Filipinos in explaining the rarity of Calico males.
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References:
Borinsky, Jeffrey. "Cat Organ." Mechanical Music Digest. May 1998. http://www.mmdigest.com/Archives/Digests/199805/1998.05.12.07.html
Crosby, Janet. Are Calico Cats Always Female? http://vetmedicine.about.com/od/catbreed1/f/FAQ_calicocats.htm
Is it true that cats with three colors have relatively shorter lifespans than those that have one color or two? http://www.answerbag.com/q_view/447758
Sunquist, Mel and Sunquist, Fiona. The Domestic Cat: History, Folklore, Ecology, and Behavior. In Wild Cats of the World. The University of Chicago Press, 2002. University of Chicago Press Site: http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/779998.html
Why most calico cats are female? http://catfactsparadise.blogspot.com/2008/03/why-most-calico-cats-are-female.html
Maternal Aggression in Cats. PetPlace.com Site.www.petplace.com/cats/maternal-aggression-in-cats/page1.aspx
Photo Credits:
http://catfactsparadise.blogspot.com/2008/03/why-most-calico-cats-are-female.html
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3086/2355696504_8773cd25de.jpg
http://askville.amazon.com/male-calico-cats-worth-money/AnswerViewer.do?requestId=26434222
Thanks for the seed, photos and illustrations.
How I miss my (two-colored) cat, Charlie. He's at least 5 years gone now. Cats are wonderful pets.
Your references are exhaustive, but I can tell it was a labor of love.
Good article Jesusa.
Very interesting article. I had heard many stories of male cats killing kittens, but usually it was to cause the female to become receptive to breeding again. I hadn't heard the "Cat King" tale however. Thank you for the story. I have had cats all my life too. My 16 year old calico died last summer, and a 13 year old red persian male died in November. Loved your pictures too. Good post.
I once had a male calico cat. My cousin that was at a Uni. research lad wanted to take it and study because it was a male and rare. I let the cat be a cat and he lived a long life.
Yes cats and other male animals will kill offspring, one, it brings the female back into heat, two, make sure the blood line is the present males bloodline. You keep the kittens away from other cats at least until their eyes open.
I have one male cat that adopted kittens and he was really good with them. Just couldn't feed them but he loved playing with them, washing them (all my males get fixed).
Neat article and nothing to be alarmed about. But sad when it does occur. Also mother cat will kill her kittens as will other animals, if there is a biological need, ie., the kittens are sick.
That is sad. I had a cat once whose kittens all died in one litter. I looked them over carefully, there was no trauma of any sort so I believe maybe they were defective in some way. She was so heartbroken though that she sneaked out and "stole" 3 newborn baby bunnies from somewhere(?) brought them into her "nest" and raised all three, even teaching them to use the litter box. She seemed very concerned about their hopping though. LOL I finally took them out and released them at about 4 months old. I hope they were all right. Cats are awesome and mysterious creatures to me.
Don't know what might of happened (other than me losing my mind over hopping kitties underfoot all the time!). As to nursing other babies, she did that too, there were two other cats near us with babies. The three moms were always dragging the babies out on this patio so they could be in the sun, and you could see the moms all sleeping stretched out in the sun, each with different sized babies taking advantage. Seems the babies would wander around, see "food" and just stop and eat. It was SO funny. Cleanest babies I ever saw too! LOL
I have had cats also kill their kittens. This happened when I was young so my mom had to explain. It is always so sad, every one of your stories just break my heart.
Really good article, never heard of the Asian Tomcat but have heard related parts. Keep up the good work!!
Good and very interesting article. I never heard the myth about a calico cat king. I think it is a quite charming myth, albeit cruel. But then again, while nature and her animals are staggeringly beautiful, so is she so very, very cruel. Sigh...
I love cats, all cats.
It is so sad how many cats are without homes.I wish I had a place for them all,And I'm a Dog Lover,But Cats are Great as well.............:^)
Very interesting article, Jesusa. I was a vet-tech in our county animal shelter for five years and never saw a male calico - veeeery rare. So sorry for your loss. I do like your theory that the myth is a clever way to explain that rarity.
In the veterinary world there is also some evidence that a mama-cat (queen) can get tired after repeated litters and will kill her own kittens due to protein and mineral deficiency. Not to get all scientific - just that their little mama-cat bodies get tired sometimes. But who really knows - cats are good at keeping their mysteries secret!
Our local animal shelters are massively overcrowded with animals from lots of people saying thay can't afford to keep their pets. Our county shelter is spaying, neutering, vaccinating, worming, and microchipping cats and adopting them out for $10, and the ASPCA shelter is doing the same treatments and giving the cats away with a bag of food for free. Our local foodbank for humans is now accepting and giving away pet food, too.
Thanks for sharing this myth of the Cat King - I'll share it with my friends.
Yes, Jesusa, I too have seen some of the odd and and sometimes gruesome behavior you've mentioned. I once had a veterinarian tell me that it was a mother animal's way of taking back her baby so she could remake it better the next time.
Cats and dogs are so much more sensitive to their bodies and environment than we humans will ever be. It's our job to love 'em even if we don't understand everything they do.
Interesting article Jesusa. I've never heard that story of cat kings before. And the cat organ? The things people invent.
I guess next time one of my kitties misbehaves instead of getting out the spray bottle I now have another option ;-).
What an interesting article. I've heard of Tom cats killing babies before and it's just sad. I never seen it though. Thankfully
Great article! Thanks. I'm not trying to thread jack but I think you will be interested in this story I wrote early last year. It's about the travails of a feral cat named 'Stache. This is the story that introduced 'Stache.
Very interesting story and good pics too - thanks for posting! :)
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