Bastet
by
Stephanie Cass
The
Egyptian cat-headed goddess, Bastet was strictly a solar
deity until the arrival of Greek influence on Egyptian society,
when she became a lunar goddess due to the Greeks associating
her with their Artemis.
Dating
from the 2nd Dynasty (roughly 2890-2686 BCE), Bastet was
originally portrayed as either a wild desert cat or as a
lioness, and only became associated with the domesticated
feline around 1000 BCE.
She
was commonly paired with Sakhmet,
the lion-headed goddess of Memphis, Wadjet, and Hathor.
Bastet
was the "Daughter of Ra", a designation
that placed her in the same ranks as such goddesses as Ma'at
and Tefnut. Additionally, Bastet
was one of the "Eyes of Ra", the title of an "avenger" god
who is sent out specifically to lay waste to the enemies
of Egypt and her gods.
The
cult of Bastet was centered in Bubastis (located in the
delta region, near modern- day Zagazig) from at least the
4th Dynasty. In the Late Period Bubastis was the capital
of Egypt for a dynasty, and a few kings took her name into
their royal titles. Bubastis was made famous by the traveler
Herodotus in the 4th century BCE, when he described in his
annals one of the festivals that takes place in honor of
Bastet. Excavations in the ruins of Tell-Basta (the former
Bubastis) have yielded many discoveries, including a graveyard
with mummified holy cats.
Because
the Greeks equated Bastet with Diana and Artemis and Horus
with Apollo, Bastet became adopted into the Osiris-Isis
myth as their daughter (this association, however, was never
made previous to the arrival of Hellenistic influence on
Egypt).
She
is stated to be the mother of the lion-headed god Mihos
(who was also worshipped in Bubastis, along with Thoth).
She
is depicted most commonly as a woman with the head of a
domesticated or wild cat or lion, or as a cat itself.
The
name of Bastet in hieroglyphs: 
The
Encyclopedia Mythica