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Bastet Cat Goddess Statue, 8 Inches

Bastet Cat Goddess Statue, 8 Inches
Regular price $42.95 USD
Regular price Sale price $42.95 USD
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Primary Spiritual Use: Protection
Secondary Spiritual Use: Happiness
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Spiritualist-Approved Instructions & Product Info ✅

Long before cats were household companions, they were sacred. Bastet is the Egyptian cat goddess, guardian of the home and family, goddess of joy, music, fertility, and the fierce, protective love of a mother cat. This statue shows her in her cat form, the sleek seated cat whose dignity carries an unmistakable undercurrent of power.

At eight inches, with fine detail picked out in enamel, she is sized to anchor an altar or shelf as a daily presence rather than a piece kept behind glass.

Key Features

Bastet in her cat form. The seated cat, her earliest and most recognized form, with simple, elegant lines and fine detail.

Enamel detailing. Decorative detail picked out in enamel against the cold-cast resin.

Eight inches of altar presence. Substantial enough to anchor a devotional space, and sized to be used and lived with.

Product Details

  • Height: about 8 inches (approximately 3 x 5 x 8 inches)
  • Material: cold-cast resin
  • Finish: detail picked out in enamel
  • Form: seated cat (Bastet in her cat form)
  • Use: deity statue, altar focal point, home protection
  • SKU: SB250
  • Sold by Plentiful Earth

The Spiritual Significance

Bastet was one of the most widely venerated deities of ancient Egypt, her cult centered at Bubastis in the Nile Delta. She held dominion over the home, family, fertility, music, and joy, and she was a fierce protector, a guardian against disease, evil spirits, and harm to the household. Her image, a seated cat or a woman with a cat's head, appeared on amulets and temple walls across millennia of continuous worship.

On a modern altar she is honored both for her warmth and for her protection. Practitioners call on Bastet to guard the home and those within it, to bless children and family, to invite joy, music, and pleasure, and to lend her watchful, protective presence to a space. Whether your path is Kemetic reconstruction or an eclectic practice that welcomes Egyptian deities, working with her accurately, as the specific goddess of hearth, joy, and fierce protection, honors the tradition she comes from.

How To Use

  1. Place her at the center of an altar or in a spot that watches over the home, such as a windowsill or a family space.
  2. Welcome her by cleaning the statue, holding it, and speaking her name and your hopes for the relationship; a first offering of milk, water, or incense is traditional.
  3. For home protection, light a candle before her and ask specifically for her guardianship of the people and place you care about.
  4. Invite her joyful side with offerings of music, flowers, or a dish of milk, and simple daily acknowledgment rather than attention only when you need something.
  5. Keep the space clean, refresh perishable offerings, and dust the statue gently with a soft cloth.

Pairs Well With

History & Occult Background

Bastet (also spelled Bast) was worshipped from the Old Kingdom onward, with her great festival at Bubastis described by the Greek historian Herodotus as among the most joyous in Egypt. In her earliest forms she was a lioness or lion-headed woman, reflecting fierce solar and protective aspects; over time she became associated with the domesticated cat and her character softened toward the nurturing, playful, and protective qualities of the household cat. Cats were so revered for their link to Bastet that harming one could be a capital offense, and hundreds of thousands of mummified cats were offered at her temple. She entered modern Western practice through Egyptomania and now appears across both eclectic Paganism and Kemetic reconstruction as a goddess of protection, home, cats, and the moon.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who is Bastet?

She is the Egyptian goddess of the home, family, joy, music, and fertility, and a fierce protector of the household against harm and evil. She is most recognized in her cat form, the form this statue depicts.

Why is she shown as a cat rather than a woman?

The seated cat is among Bastet's earliest and most recognized forms. She is also depicted as a woman with a cat's head holding a sistrum, but the pure feline form is intimate and approachable while still conveying her full dignity.

What offerings are traditional for Bastet?

Milk, water, flowers, music, and incense are all fitting. Many devotees also offer cat-related items or simply a dish of cream and daily acknowledgment. Consistency matters more than elaborateness.

Can I work with her outside a Kemetic tradition?

Yes, with care for accuracy. Bastet is a specific goddess of hearth, joy, and fierce protection. Working with her as she actually is, rather than as a vague cat goddess, enriches the practice and respects her tradition.

How do I care for the statue?

Dust it with a soft dry cloth and keep it out of prolonged direct sunlight to protect the enamel detail. Avoid soaking the resin; a barely damp cloth is enough for occasional cleaning.

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