The state in America that has the most cats is the state of Vermont.
Roughly 45% of households in Vermont own at least one cat and Maine also follows closely to Vermont in cat ownership and around 44% of households in Maine own cats.
West Virginia, Indiana and New Hampshire also are states with the most cats although Vermont tops them all in cat ownership.
Russia also has a high rate of cat ownership and over half of households in Russia own a cat, which is linked to historical factors such as the appreciation of cats for pest control in the Hermitage Museum.
White and African Americans in the United States also tend to love cats the most and also have high rates of cat ownership.
The religion that likes cats is the ancient Egyptian religion who revered cats as sacred symbols of goddesses like Bastet, which is a practice that included mummifying and offering cats to the deities.
Cats also hold mythological significance in other cultures and are associated with fertility and good luck in Japanese and Norse traditions.
In Ancient Egypt, cats were revered as divine and mummified after death and Russia also considers cats to bring good luck and allows cats in temples and the Islamic faith admires cats for their symbolic blessings and cleanliness.
The country Turkey also respects cats.
The cat capital of the world is Istanbul, Turkey, due to their large population of semi-wild cats that are deeply integrated into the city's culture and daily life.
Residents and visitors of Istanbul, Turkey also care for the cats and they are often seen lounging in historic sites, mosques and cafes, creating a unique atmosphere in which the cats are considered to be integral residents instead of just stray cats.
Cats originated in the Middle East's Fertile Crescent, around 10,000 years ago.
Domesticated cats that originated in the Middle East's Fertile Crescent around 10,000 years ago, originated as wildcats were drawn to the abundant rodent populations around early human agricultural settlements.
And the earliest evidence of human and cat companionship is a 9,500 year old burial of a human with a cat on the island of Cyprus, which indicates transportation by boat.
The domestication of cats we know today was a mutually beneficial although not fully intentional process.
And early farmers stored grain, which also attracted rodents like mice and rats and the rodents in turn attracted wild cats who ate them.
And the availability of prey near human settlements also likely led to cats becoming accustomed to humans.
A 9,500 year old burial in Cyprus also shows a human and a cat buried together, and the cat's presence suggests that the cat was brought to the island by boat.
Genetic analysis also confirms that domestic cats also descended from the Near Eastern wildcat "Felis silvestris lybica".
Cats also spread with humans along trade routes and they were also very useful on ships that were transporting of grain from the Near East.
Cats, in the family of Felidae also first appeared in Asia around 10 to 15 million years ago, with their evolutionary radiation beginning in Asia during the Miocene epoch.
Modern domestic cats, although originated from the Near Eastern wildcat subspecies, "Felis Silvestris lybica" and were first domesticated around 10,000 years ago in the Fertile Crescent, which is a region in the Middle East.