Cats have nine lives, cat-o-nine-tails, etc. Isn’t there a mythical cat with nine tails? What’s the deal?
Good question, & sharp wits to ask it.
I don’t know, but I’ll bump the thread.
BTW–“3” is considered “mystical”, & 9 is 3X3.
My guess would be that the reason the whip called a “cat-o-nine-tails” has nine strands is because it’s made by braiding strands of rope or leather, and braiding is usually done in groups of three?
Braid together three braids of three strands each, leave the ends of all the strands loose for flogging purposes, and you’ve got a nine-tailed whip.
Why it’s called a “cat”, though, and whether the nine strands of the whip have any relation to the proverbial nine lives of the domestic cat, beats me.
http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/N/nine.html
not sure how accurate this is …
.
Oh. Just saw a reference to the “cat-o-nine-tails” claiming it was called a “cat” because of the “scratches” it left on the back of the victim.
And the “nine lives” tradition is explained here thusly:
Absent any other evidence, I’m going with these two explanations, and with the hypothesis (contra the OP) that there is no systematic identification of cats with the number nine. The apparent similarity of the “cat-o-nine-tails” and the “cat with nine lives” is just a coincidence. That’s my guess, anyway.
Don’t know the answer, but I thought I’d let you know that Brazilian cats have been cheated: they only have seven lives. It would be interesting to find out why this discrepency exists, even though both cultures speak of multiple cat lives.