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Where do pet cats come from? Scientists finally solve mystery

New genomic evidence traces domestic cats back to North Africa — and shows they only arrived in Europe around 2,000 years ago

Published on: Nov 29, 2025 07:34 am IST
By Shirin Gupta
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A new genetic analysis has dramatically altered our understanding of the domestic cat's journey. Science published a new research using nuclear DNA evidence that says modern house cats (Felis catus) descended from wildcats native to North Africa and not the Near East, as previously believed.

New Study on Cat Domestication(Unsplash)

Researchers discovered that the earliest evidence of true domestic cats in Europe dates only about 2,000 years ago, during the Roman Empire, rather than alongside Neolithic farmers 6,000–7,000 years ago, after sequencing the genomes of 70 ancient cats from 97 archaeological sites spanning 10,000 years across Europe, Africa, and Anatolia.

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Why did cats become our companions?

Researches were conducted on the dominant theory that held that cats were domesticated around 9,500–10,000 years ago in the Fertile Crescent. The domestication emerged as early farmers who attracted rodents and consequently wildcats helped protect grain stores.

Let us begin in the beginning. North Africa did emerge as the primary source in the new study, but genetic and archaeological data in early studies had pointed to the Near East and even ancient Egypt. Previous mitochondrial-DNA studies had also traced domestic cats back to wildcats in the Near East (Felis silvestris lybica), associated with early farming communities.

It wasn't always evident, though, if these cats qualified as "domesticated."

The authors of the new study say, "This is due to a variety of factors, including the paucity of felid remains in archaeological contexts, the difficulty of assigning species and domestication status to skeletal elements [because wild and domesticated forms overlap in size and morphology], and the limited number of ancient and modern genomes analyzed so far. As a result, present hypotheses regarding when, where, and how cats were domesticated are poorly supported by empirical evidence."

Early cat domestication came from two known centers:

  1. The Neolithic Levant region approximately 9,500 years ago, and
  2. Pharaonic Egypt approximately 3,500 years ago.

The remains of a cat interred next to a human provide evidence of domestication in the Levant. On the other hand, there is a wealth of evidence of cat domestication in ancient Egyptian society, from depictions of cats consuming food close to people to mummified cat corpses.

The new study examined the genomes of 17 contemporary wildcats from Italy, Bulgaria, and North Africa, 70 ancient cats from historic sites in Europe and Anatolia (modern-day Turkey) spanning the previous 11,000 years.

The findings show that, contrary to popular belief, Neolithic farmers did not bring modern cats to Europe until approximately 2000 years ago. According to analysis, modern domestic cats are more closely linked to African wildcats than to Levantine cats.

Mysteries remain

The fact that all domestic cats today are descended from North African wildcats highlights how a relatively small population spread across continents in just over two millennia with the help of human movement and trade.

It is still to be noted that while ancient cats appear in human-associated burials as early as 7,500 BCE on islands like Cyprus, genetic evidence so far shows those cats probably were not direct ancestors of modern housecats.

The authors point out that additional information from Egypt and other areas would be helpful in identifying source populations, even though this study aids in determining the origins of contemporary domestic cats.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Shirin Gupta

Shirin Gupta is a content producer with the Hindustan Times. She covers everything between politics, entertainment and sports at the US desk. Shirin got interested in political journalism during her time as a web editor at her college newspaper NCC News in Syracuse when she first started seeing the effects of national politics in life of her fellow colleagues. Shirin has worked on a wide range of fast-moving and developing stories locally when she was at NCC editing accessible reports for the audience. Her current role requires her to track real-time updates, verify information and present balanced coverage across diverse beats. Covering US politics from an international newsroom perspective has further deepened her understanding of how domestic decisions can have far-reaching global consequences. With a keen interest in international affairs, Shirin continues to build her expertise in geopolitics, policy shifts, and cross-border developments. She aims to learn and evolve her reporting in matters of geopolitics and international issues. Outside the newsroom Shirin writes about books and music for her personal blog. She is an avid consumer of pop culture and reveres literature.

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