420 
CARNIVORES. 
dark grey. It has been recorded from Guiana and Chili, but doubtless also 
inhabits the intervening States. 
The Caffre, or Egyptian Cat ( Felis caffra). 1 
With the caffre, or, as it is frequently termed, the Egyptian cat, we come to a 
species of more than ordinary interest, since, by many authorities, it is regarded as 
the parent stock from which the domestic cat of Europe has sprung. 
The caffre cat is about the size of a large domestic cat, and is generally of a 
yellowish colour (becoming more or less grey in some specimens), darker on the 
back, and paler on the under-parts. The body is marked with faint pale stripes, 
which assume, however, on the limbs the form of distinct dark horizontal bands; 
and the tail, which is relatively long, is also more or less distinctly ringed towards 
its tip, which is completely black. The sides of the face are marked by two 
horizontal streaks. Very generally the soles of the hind-feet in this cat are black, 
although in the paler coloured varieties this part is not darker than the back. 
The caffre cat has a wide distribution, being found throughout Africa, from 
the Cape to Algiers and Egypt, and also extending into South-Western Asia in 
Syria and Arabia. In past times it also ranged into South-Eastern Europe; its 
fossilised remains having been obtained from the caverns of the rock of Gibraltar, 
in company with those of several extinct species of mammals. At the period when 
the caffre cat lived in Gibraltar, Spain was doubtless connected by land with 
Africa. These cats, as is well-known, were held sacred by the ancient Egyptians, 
and enormous numbers of their bodies were embalmed and preserved in tombs and 
pits; the largest repositories being found in the cities of Bubastis and Beni-Hassan. 
The cats found in the tombs of the two localities mentioned are regarded by Pro¬ 
fessor Virchow, who has devoted much study and attention to this subject, merely 
as tamed individuals of the wild caffre cat, and having no sort of relationship with 
the domestic cat; the origin of which, it is considered, is to be sought in Europe or 
Asia. On the other hand, Dr. A. Nehring, 2 of Berlin, whose opinion is entitled to 
much weight, considers that the black sole of the liind-foot, common to the caffre 
cat and the domestic cat of Europe, is indicative of the descent of the latter from 
the former, although it is quite probable that there may be also a strain of Asiatic 
blood in our cats. And much the same opinion is entertained by Professor Mivart. 
In this connection it is important to notice that in South Africa it has been 
ascertained that the domestic cat will breed freely with the caffre cat. On the 
other hand, as we have already had occasion to mention, there are several species of 
Asiatic cats, such as the leopard-cat and the rusty-spotted cat, together with others 
referred to below, which will cross equally readily with the domestic cat of India. 
It is, however, quite possible that this may not affect the origin of the European 
cat, since Dr. Nehring is of opinion that the domestic cat of the Chinese has an 
exclusively Asiatic descent, and is thus quite distinct from that of Europe; while 
Mr. Blanford suggests an Indian origin for the domestic cats of that country. 
1 Also known as F. caligata and F. maniculata. 
2 This writer considers that there are two species of Egyptian cat, viz., F. caffra (or maniculata), and 
F. caligata. 
