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The 14th-century French cat that used this kitty door must have been a scrawny, hardworking
petit chat indeed. This fine example of feline ingress (and egress, and ingress - do cats go in and out as much when they are calling the shots?) is found at
this page of the the Walters Art Museum. There you'll find that while not many examples of cat doors have survived from the Middle Ages, no less a source than Geoffrey Chaucer mentions one in "The Miller's Tale." There's also one at Manchester, England's Chetham Library, in a
door dating from 1421.
Clearly from a house that didn't have to worry about raccoons & possums.
ReplyDeleteWhat an interesting post! Loved the one at the medieval library.
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