8 Spooky Facts About Black Cats

96 comments

There are few cats that are as iconic as the black cat. Especially when Halloween rolls around. What would our Halloween decorations be without a yowling black cat with its back arched and fur standing on end? And what would our Halloween costumes be like without at least one girl gettin' spooky with it as an iconic Black Cat? 

 

While there are tons of superstitions swirling around the much maligned - and also much beloved - black cat, there are just as many interesting facts that make them unique.

1. Black cats’ bad rep stems from the Middle Ages.

Pope Gregory IX decided that black cats were used to worship the devil and saw them as evil creatures. The belief only continued to spread across the world - and the ages. Thanks, Greg. 

 

2. Black cats were often thought to be witches’ familiars.

The Puritans (circa 1600s) believed that witches could actually shape-shift into black cats and spy on their neighbors.

 

3. Black cats were thought to be a sailor's best friend.

Sailors and their wives saw black cats as guardians of safe passage. These inky felines were seen as harbingers of such good fortune that they became a hot commodity, and some sailors couldn’t even afford to buy them.

 

4. In Ireland, Cait Sidhe, pronounced “caught shee,” were mythical, fairy-like creatures who took the form of large, all-black cats were said to be the King of the Cats. 

On the night of Samhain (a Celtic festival similar to Halloween), if you left a saucer of milk out for the fairy cat, your house would be blessed. If no milk was left for the mysterious black cat, you would be cursed and all your cows' milk would dry up.

 

 

5. They are said to be "super cats."

Researchers at the National Institutes of Health discovered that the genetic mutations that cause cats to have black coats may offer them some protection from diseases. 

 

6. They can rust.

All right, so your black cat won't actually rust if you leave them out in the rain. They will complain VERY loudly, though. But if your black cat has a tabby stripe gene and spends hours napping in a sunbeam, their fur can turn a rusty brown color. Why? The sun’s rays break down the pigment in their fur to reveal the underlying tabby stripes.

 

7. Black cats make excellent wingmen.

In Japan, young women are encouraged to own black felines to increase their chance of romance. And in the English Midlands, giving a bride the gift of a black cat was thought to bring her good luck. 

 

 

8. Black cats are often overlooked for adoption.

Black cats are often the last to get adopted and may be passed over for cats of other colors despite the fact that they're just cats like any other cat. It could be because of the superstitions surrounding their inky fur or the belief that black cats are harder to photograph.

Do you love black cats? Let us know in the comments! 


96 comments


  • Lori

    If you want to photograph a black cat. Download this filter I discovered in the App Store: Analog Paris by ordinaryfactory inc. Filter 01 is the best even for low lights. I think you have to buy it for like $3 (i forgot the exact price) but its really worth it. my black cat looks like any other colored cat when i use this filter on her photos, u can see the details in her face & fur. I use it for all of my iphone photos too. I hope im not violating anything here for sharing some product that might help photographing black cats.


  • Marion

    Hi…first, I love black cats. (Who doesn’t?)

    BUT your headline is bad, bad, bad—chiefly because:

    1) The headline has nothing to do with the content of the article. I’m sure that you gave it this title because of black cats/Halloween thing. But the headline could leave people who aren’t very bright to think that there ARE “spooky” things about black cats. And that is:

    2) BAD for black cats, because some stupid people today still DO think that they’re “bad luck.” Which is ridiculous. But worse,

    3) Some of those stupid people kill or otherwise harm black cats, because they believe social media nonsense, about black cats being “bad luck,” or “evil.”

    You’re a pro-cat company: you shouldn’t contribute to the prejudice—and endangerment—of black cats just because someone didn’t THINK, and wrote a headline that indicates that there’s something supernaturally evil about black cats. Please change this headline, it could cost black cats their lives. :( (I’m telling you this, as both a professional editor and writer.)

    4) A fun fact that you should have included: there’s no such thing as a black cat on Earth, who’s ALL black. Every black cat on this planet has at least ONE white hair—that is because, during the aforementioned Middle Ages—people bred black cats with cats of other colors, mostly with a large amount of white, to try to breed the “evil” out of them. Go ahead, try to find a black cat who doesn’t have ONE white hair on her/his body. You can’t do it. :) (And this, I tell you, as someone who studied Medieval history and theology in undergrad and grad schools. I learned this from some of the world’s greatest Medievalists.) :)


  • There

    I’ve had black cats all my life. They are wonderful companions.


  • Leslie Turner

    Three of our five cats are black and we wouldn’t take a million dollars for them! LOVE them!


  • Sue Line

    I had an all black cat called Wellington, & he was the most handsome cat I’ve ever had,. Also, he was very king like &, after he went to,the rainbow bridge I decided to not have an all black cat because they’d never match up to him.


Leave a comment

Please note, comments must be approved before they are published

This site is protected by hCaptcha and the hCaptcha Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.