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3 myths that have haunted black cats for hundreds of years

Category

🐳
Animals
Transcript
00:00If you're superstitious, you know to avoid black cats at all costs.
00:04But do you know the three reasons why?
00:06Number three, witch hunts.
00:08During the early European witch hunts, the women accused of witchcraft tended to have a healthy disrespect of authority, much like cats.
00:16So it's no surprise that a lot of them had cats as pets.
00:19So they were thought to be witches in animal form.
00:23Number two, nighttime.
00:24Because cats are active at dusk, and especially black cats are hard to see in the dark,
00:30people began to believe that they were nightly spirits.
00:33They would appear one minute and seemingly disappear the next.
00:36Number one, the bubonic plague.
00:39By the Middle Ages, people were so paranoid of black cats that they started blaming them for the plague.
00:45Ironically, as they got rid of cats, the rat population grew, and the plague spread even faster.
00:51Did you know that the idea that black cats are bad luck is not universal?
00:56Here are four examples.
00:57Number four.
00:58In ancient Egypt, black cats were honored.
01:01Number three.
01:02In Norse mythology, black cats would bless people with a good harvest.
01:06Number two.
01:07In some parts of Japan, black cats are believed to bring love or fortune.
01:11Number one.
01:12In some Scottish towns, black cats are said to bring prosperity.
01:16In the United States, black cats are the least likely to get adopted because of the bad luck stigma.
01:21But knowing the history now, it's easy to realize that black cats are just as wonderful and special as any other cat.
01:27Would you be interested in adopting a black cat over the holidays?
01:30Would you be interested in adopting a black cat over the holidays?

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