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Everyone knows that the goddess Frejya's chariot was pulled by cats, but what kind of cats are we talking about? Are they giant sized house-cats? Were there any puma-sized cats in ancient Scandinavia?

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    A chariot pulled by cats is peculiar, indeed. I don't think any cats larger than lynxes are (or were) endemic to Scandinavia. One possibility I remember reading somewhere is that the word used for Frejya's cats could also mean bears.
    – yannis
    Oct 19, 2017 at 22:01
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    They might have been Norwegian Forest cats or some wild ancestor thereof, a relatively large breed of cats that appeared in Norway via interbreeding of foreign and local cats a couple of centuries before Snorri's writings.
    – Semaphore
    Oct 20, 2017 at 4:21

3 Answers 3

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There are actually two references to her cats in Gylfaginning (part of the Prose Edda):

Sessrumir, her hall, is large and beautiful. And when she travels, she drives two cats and sits in a chariot. (Faulkes: 24)

…Freyr drove in a chariot with a boar called Gullinbursti or Slidrugtanni. But Heimdall rode a horse called Gulltopp, and Freyia her cats. (Faulkes: 50)

The passage about Baldr's funeral in Skaldskaparmal (also part of the Prose Edda) uses the word fress for Freyja's cats, which means tom-cat, although apparently it could also mean "bear" which led to some confusion. (Modern scholars translate fress as "tom-cat" in this case.) Another reference to Freyja's cats in Skald., saying that Freyja can be called “possessor of tom-cats", uses the same word.
The two references to Freyja's cats in Gylfaginning use the word köttr, which could also mean a marten or weasel. This makes a little more sense, as you can see how cats, weasels and martens could be lumped together. However, both parts of the Prose Edda were written by the same person, Snorri Sturluson, so presumably he meant the same thing in both cases.

Cat-lovers are partial to the idea that Freyja's cats were the ancestors of modern Norwegian forest cats, which are large, powerful cats (like Maine Coon Cats). The Scandinavians did have cats as pets, but whether Freyja's cats were simply medium-sized furry animals or actual cats is open to question, although the detail about the volva's outfit in andejons' answer is suggestive.

Quotes from Edda, Snorri Sturluson/Anthony Faulkes, Everyman Press, Penguin, 1992.

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    This is the better answer, because it contains the linguistic context.
    – Spencer
    Oct 22, 2017 at 17:17
  • There has been some recent discussion on the fuzziness of words for animals in Ancient Greek, which makes the point about fress particularly interesting. Does Freyja have any other associations with bears?
    – DukeZhou
    Oct 23, 2017 at 21:59
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    Boars yes, bears no.
    – solsdottir
    Oct 24, 2017 at 0:51
  • I just saw this on Facebook, and I thought I would throw it in - it's a discussion of the linguistics of the Old Norse word for cat, and adds that the European wildcat died out during the Norse Bronze Age.
    – solsdottir
    Oct 27, 2017 at 0:25
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    I will merely add the observation that Norse myths tend to be iffy about relative sizes. In one and the same tale, a giant's glove seems to be a great hall to gods, who use the thumb as a sleeping chamber before learning it's a glove, and the same gods can sit at the table with giants and use their utensils without trouble.
    – Mary
    Jul 12, 2020 at 14:47
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They were tomcats.

There is really not very much told about Freyas cats. In Gylfaginning, XXIV, we are told that

When she goes forth, she drives her cats and sits in a chariot.

(Note that the original actually specifies "two cats"). This is repeated in XLIX, when the gods travel to Balder's funeral:

... Freyja drove her cats.

In Skáldskaparmál, XX, we are also told of a kenning for her which is "of the Gib-Cats".

This is everything I've found in the primary sources that explicitly deals with Freya's cats.

The largest cats that is and were found in Scandinavia is the Eurasian Lynx, but it is unlikely that there is some confusion here. Considering that Frey was pulled by a boar, and Thor by goats, we should probably not speculate too much along the lines that they can not have been ordinary cats.

However, some scholars have wanted to link this with the Mediterranean goddess Cybele, who had a chariot pulled by lions (but this is likely coincidence). There is also a passage in the Saga of Eric the Red, in which a völva appears and does sejdr. She has her clothing described in detail, including a hood of lambskin, lined with white catskin, and gloves made of catskin, which had white fur turned inwards. Since Freya was associated with sejdr, this has suggested a connection with her cats. So, if you want to depict the cats, making them white would not be a totally wild guess.

Sources

The last passage on scholarly speculation is mostly out of Gro Steinsland's Fornnordisk religion.

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Read something somewhere of a story of Thor running across a magic male cat who was singing to two grey kittens. When Thor asked if the cat was the father it said yes and explains that he methrew a girl cat and they had the kittens and the mother cat left him as a single parent. The cat then asks Thor for help. Thor accepts thinking to give the kittens to Freya. The magic cato then turns into a bird and flies away.. Speculation is then they are the "Russian Blue" breed. Being as they had a magical father they could possibly be strong enough to pull a chariot, maybe change their size at will?

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