Cats and other familiars
Many modern day witches, including myself have or had an animal that is/was their familiar. Mine is a beautiful black cat called Mystery and she is always by my side during rituals, spells and workings. We have a powerful bond that is amazing. Before Mystery I had a rat called Poo-Ki and before that believe it or not, a budgie called Joey.
You will, if you want to, find out you’re familiar and it’s sometimes a surprise when they present themselves in a form you wouldn’t normally expect!Having a familiar is a very special experience and their help in our craft is for me without question. I certainly feel that it’s the same familiar each time, having been reincarnated but of course that’s my own personal opinion.
The idea of the witch’s familiar is one of the most enduring and mysterious elements of magical folklore. Across centuries of myth, religion, superstition, and occult practice, familiars have appeared as spirit companions, animal guides, emissaries of the unseen world, and symbols of the witch’s relationship with nature and power. The black cat beside the cauldron, the raven perched upon the shoulder, or the toad hidden in the cottage corner are images deeply woven into the Western imagination. Yet the history of familiars is far more complex than popular stereotypes suggest. It stretches from ancient animistic beliefs and shamanic traditions to the witch trials of early modern Europe and into modern Pagan spirituality.
Origins of the Familiar Spirit
The concept of spirit companions predates the European witch trials by thousands of years. In many ancient cultures, people believed that spirits could inhabit animals or communicate through them. In shamanic traditions of Siberia, the Americas, and northern Europe, spiritual practitioners often described journeys assisted by animal spirits. These beings acted as protectors, guides, and intermediaries between the human world and the spirit realm.
Ancient Egyptians revered cats as sacred animals connected to the goddess Bastet, while ravens and wolves carried spiritual significance among Norse and Celtic peoples. In many animistic belief systems, animals possessed souls, wisdom, and magical potency. The boundary between human and animal consciousness was seen as permeable rather than fixed.
These older beliefs likely contributed to later ideas surrounding familiars. Rather than being “pets” in the modern sense, familiars were originally understood as spiritual allies—beings that could move between worlds and assist magical practitioners.
Medieval Christianity and the Demonisation of Familiars
The image of the familiar changed dramatically during the Middle Ages and early modern period. As Christianity became dominant in Europe, many folk beliefs involving spirits, magic, and nature worship were increasingly viewed with suspicion. By the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, theologians and inquisitors began to associate witchcraft with heresy and diabolic pacts.
During the European witch trials, familiars were often interpreted as demons sent by the Devil. Witch hunters believed that these spirits served witches in exchange for devotion or blood. Trial records describe familiars appearing as cats, dogs, mice, ferrets, hares, crows, or even insects.
In England and Scotland particularly, the familiar spirit became a central element of witchcraft accusations. Supposed witches were interrogated about the names and forms of their spirit companions. Some confessed—often under torture or coercion—to feeding their familiars with drops of blood from hidden marks on their bodies known as “witch’s marks.” ( be sure to check out my articles on the witch trails!
One of the most infamous English witch hunters was Matthew Hopkins, active during the English Civil War in the seventeenth century. Hopkins’ writings contain numerous accounts of familiars with strange names and animal forms. These descriptions reveal both fear and fascination with the idea of spirit animals acting as magical servants.
Interestingly, many accused witches were poor, elderly, or socially isolated women who genuinely kept animals for companionship. A widow living alone with a cat or toad could easily become the target of local suspicion. Thus the familiar became entangled not only with religion but also with gender, poverty, and social fear.
Common Familiar Animals and Their Symbolism
Different animals carried different symbolic meanings in folklore and occult tradition.
Cats
The black cat became the most iconic familiar of all. Cats were associated with mystery, night, independence, and feminine power. Their reflective eyes and silent movements made them appear uncanny to medieval observers.
In European folklore, witches were said to transform into cats or send cats to carry out magical tasks. Black cats in particular became linked to bad luck and sorcery, though in some cultures they were considered lucky and protective.
Ravens and Crows
Birds such as ravens and crows were connected to prophecy, death, and hidden knowledge. In Norse mythology, the god Odin possessed two ravens, Huginn and Muninn, who traveled the world gathering information.
Because these birds scavenged battlefields and graveyards, they were often viewed as messengers between life and death. My grandmother actually had a Myna Bird as her familiar that apparently could talk!
Toads and Frogs
Toads frequently appear in witch lore and magical recipes. Their connection to damp earth, poison, and transformation gave them an aura of occult power. In folklore, witches supposedly kept toads in secret containers or used them in charms and curses.
Hares
In Celtic and British folklore, hares were strongly associated with witchcraft and the moon. Stories told of witches transforming into hares to evade capture. The animal’s speed and elusive nature made it a fitting symbol of magical transformation.
Snakes
Snakes symbolised wisdom, rebirth, sexuality, and hidden knowledge. Across many cultures they represented the cyclical forces of nature because they shed their skins. In occult symbolism, serpents often embody both danger and enlightenment.
Mice and rats
Fancy rats and mice are also a popular choice for a familiar as they are small, cleaver and make good easy to keep companions that are easily hidden.
Familiars in Folk Magic and Cunning Craft
Not all magical practitioners fit the stereotype of the Satanic witch created by church authorities. Throughout Europe there existed “cunning folk” or folk healers who used charms, herbs, and protective magic. Some claimed relationships with spirit helpers that resembled familiars.
These spirits were not always viewed as evil. In some traditions they functioned more like guardian spirits or ancestral guides. Accounts from Scottish seers and English cunning men describe fairy beings, household spirits, or spectral animals that offered advice and magical assistance.
This reveals an important distinction: the familiar spirit was not universally feared. Among ordinary people, beliefs surrounding spirit helpers could coexist with Christian faith and local folk customs.
Familiars and the Feminine Archetype
The familiar also became deeply connected with cultural ideas about women, intuition, and forbidden knowledge. During the witch trials, independent women who lived outside social norms were often portrayed as dangerous because they possessed hidden wisdom or unusual relationships with nature.
The image of the old woman with her cat became a powerful archetype. In reality, elderly women often relied on animals for companionship and pest control. Yet patriarchal anxieties transformed these relationships into signs of diabolic conspiracy.
Modern feminist interpretations sometimes reclaim the familiar as a symbol of independence, intuition, and connection to the natural world. The familiar becomes not a demon but a companion embodying instinctual wisdom and emotional insight.
Familiars in Modern Paganism and Witchcraft
Contemporary Pagan and witchcraft traditions have reinterpreted the familiar in more spiritual and psychological ways. In religions such as Wicca, familiars are usually not viewed as literal demons but as spiritually sensitive animals who share a bond with magical practitioners.
Some witches believe certain pets are energetically attuned to ritual work, meditation, or psychic awareness. Cats in particular are often thought to respond strongly to altered spiritual atmospheres.
Others understand familiars symbolically rather than literally. A familiar may represent an inner guide, an animal archetype, or a spirit encountered through meditation and dreamwork. Modern occult practices influenced by Jungian psychology often treat animal companions as expressions of the subconscious mind.
There are also practitioners who distinguish between ordinary pets and true familiars. In this view, a familiar is specifically a spirit entity that may or may not take physical form.
Familiars in Literature and Popular Culture
The familiar has remained a powerful figure in fiction and fantasy. Literature and film frequently portray witches alongside magical animal companions.
Examples include:
- Salem Saberhagen from Sabrina the Teenage Witch
- Crookshanks from Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
- Jiji from Kiki’s Delivery Service
These portrayals often soften or romanticise the older folklore, transforming familiars into loyal magical companions rather than sinister spirits.
The Spiritual Meaning of the Familiar
At its deepest level, the familiar symbolizes humanity’s ancient relationship with the animal world and the unseen dimensions of existence. The familiar embodies the idea that wisdom may come not only from rational thought but also from instinct, dreams, intuition, and communion with nature.
Whether understood literally, psychologically, or symbolically, the familiar remains a bridge figure—standing between wilderness and civilization, spirit and matter, fear and companionship.
For some, the familiar represents magical partnership. For others, it reflects the shadowy fears projected onto outsiders during periods of religious persecution. Yet despite centuries of change, the familiar continues to captivate the imagination because it touches something ancient within human culture: the longing to believe that unseen forces walk beside us, sometimes wearing the eyes of an animal companion.
How to tell if an animal or pet is your familiar?
You will know instantly and undoubtedly trust me! They will make themselves known to you, instantly bond with you in a way that is way beyond a mere “pet”. When they are ready to join you and you are also ready to have a familiar then the universal energy will make it happen. Be patient; don’t force it or command anything or any animal.
How to create the familiar bond for mutual respect and love
This is key. Be patient, kind and listen well to their feelings and needs. Build a strong unbreakable bond with mutual respect and trust. It takes time but it is certainly a wonderful and powerful thing to have a familiar.
What happens when a familiar dies or goes missing
This can be very tough, I know. It can be stressful and heartbreaking to lose your familiar. If they have gone missing then it may be that their work with you is done and they’re needed elsewhere and they may return to you when that work is done or your need is greater. If they dies remember that they are not gone forever but they have done with the creature they inhabited. They are now vibrating for a while at a frequency you cannot see or hear but you can sense. Keep talking to them . In time they will return to you possibly in a totally different form. Look out for them and continue your journey together until touch time as you are separated once more.
So, now it’s over to you. Do you have a familiar? I’d love to hear your stories about experiences with familiars.