Roman numerals on stern of a British clipper ship showing draft in feet. The numbers range from 13 to 22, from bottom to top.
Template:Numeral systems
The numeric system represented by Roman numerals originated in ancient Rome and remained the usual way of writing numbers throughout Europe well into the Late Middle Ages. Numbers in this system are represented by combinations of letters from the Latin alphabet. Roman numerals, as used today, are based on seven symbols:[1]
Symbol Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.L Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.C Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.D Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.M Value 1 5 10 50 100 500 1,000
The use of Roman numerals continued long after the decline of the Roman Empire. From the 14th century on, Roman numerals began to be replaced in most contexts by the more convenient Hindu-Arabic numerals; however, this process was gradual, and the use of Roman numerals persists in some minor applications to this day.
Roman numeric system[]
Basic decimal pattern[]
The original pattern for Roman numerals used the symbols I, V. and X (1, 5, and 10) as simple tally marks. Each marker for 1 (Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I) added a unit value up to 5 (Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V), and was then added to (Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V) to make the numbers from 6 to 9:
- Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I, II, III, IIII, V, VI, VII, VIII, VIIII, X.
The numerals for 4 (Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IIII) and 9 (Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.VIIII) proved problematic (among other things, they are easily confused with Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.III and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.VIII), and are generally replaced with Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IV (one less than 5) and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IX (one less than 10). This feature of Roman numerals is called subtractive notation.
The numbers from 1 to 10 (including subtractive notation for 4 and 9) are expressed in Roman numerals as follows:
- Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, IX, X.[2]
The system being basically decimal, tens and hundreds follow the same pattern:
Thus 10 to 100 (counting in tens, with Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X taking the place of Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.L taking the place of Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.C taking the place of Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X):
- Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X, XX, XXX, XL, L, LX, LXX, LXXX, XC, C.
Note that 40 (Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XL) and 90 (Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XC) follow the same subtractive pattern as 4 and 9.
Similarly, 100 to 1000 (counting in hundreds):
- Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.C, CC, CCC, CD, D, DC, DCC, DCCC, CM, M.
Many numbers include hundreds, units and tens. The Roman numeral system being basically decimal, each "place" is added separately, in descending sequence from left to right, as with "arabic" numbers. For example, the number 39 is Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XXXIX, (three tens and a ten less one), 246 is Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CCXLVI (two hundreds, a fifty less ten, a five and a one. As each place has its own notation there is no need for place keeping zeros, so "missing places" can be simply omitted: thus 207, for instance, is written Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CCVII (two hundreds, a five and two ones) and 1066 becomes Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.MLXVI (a thousand, a fifty and a ten, a five and a one)[3][4]
Roman numerals for large numbers are nowadays seen mainly in the form of year numbers (other uses are detailed later in this article), as in these examples:
- 1776 as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.MDCCLXXVI, the date written on the book held by the Statue of Liberty.[5]
- 1954 as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.MCMLIV, as in the trailer for the movie The Last Time I Saw Paris[6]
- 1990 as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.MCMXC, used as the title of musical project Enigma's debut album MCMXC a.D., named after the year of its release.
- 2014 as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.MMXIV, the year of the games of the Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XXII (22nd) Olympic Winter Games (in Sochi)
Alternative forms[]

A typical clock face with Roman numerals in Bad Salzdetfurth, Germany
The "standard" forms described above reflect typical modern usage rather than a universally accepted convention. Usage in ancient Rome varied greatly and remained inconsistent in medieval and modern times.[7]
- Inscriptions dating from the Roman period not infrequently use "additive" forms such as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IIII and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.VIIII for "4" and "9" instead of Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IV and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IX. There are even instances of both forms appearing within the same document.
- While in standard usage subtractive notation is limited to use of "adjacent" numerals, so that 99 (for example) is written Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XCIX, forms such as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IC are not unknown.
- Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XIIX or Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IIXX are sometimes used for "18" instead of Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XVIII. The Latin word for "eighteen" is often rendered as the equivalent of "twenty less two", which may be the source of this usage.
- Sometimes Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.L are not used, with instances such as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IIIIII and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XXXXXX rather than Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.VI or Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.LX.[8][9]
An inscription on Admiralty Arch, London. The number is 1910, for which Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.MCMX would be more usual.
- Clock faces that use Roman numerals normally show Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IIII for four o’clock but Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IX for nine o’clock, a practice that goes back to very early clocks such as the Wells Cathedral clock of the late 14th century.[10][11][12] However, this is far from universal: for example, the clock on the Palace of Westminster in London (aka "Big Ben") uses a "normal" Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IV.[11]
- At the beginning of the 20th century, different representations of 900 (conventionally Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CM) appeared in several inscribed dates. For instance, 1910 is shown on Admiralty Arch, London, as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.MDCCCCX rather than Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.MCMX, while on the north entrance to the Saint Louis Art Museum, 1903 is inscribed as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.MDCDIII rather than Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.MCMIII.[13]
History[]
Pre-Roman times and ancient Rome[]
Although Roman numerals came to be written with letters of the Roman alphabet, they were originally independent symbols. The Etruscans, for example, used Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.𐌠, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.𐌡, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.𐌢, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.𐌣, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.𐌚, and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.⊕ for Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.L, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.C, and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.M, of which only Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X happened to be letters in their alphabet.
Hypotheses about the origin of Roman numerals[]
Tally marks[]
One hypothesis is that the Etrusco-Roman numerals actually derive from notches on tally sticks, which continued to be used by Italian and Dalmatian shepherds into the 19th century.[14]
Thus, ⟨Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I⟩ descends not from the letter ⟨I⟩ but from a notch scored across the stick. Every fifth notch was double cut i.e. Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.⋀, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.⋁, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.⋋, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.⋌, etc.), and every tenth was cross cut (Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X), Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IIIIΛIIIIXIIIIΛIIIIXII...), much like European tally marks today. This produced a positional system: Eight on a counting stick was eight tallies, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IIIIΛIII, or the eighth of a longer series of tallies; either way, it could be abbreviated Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ΛIII (or Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.VIII), as the existence of a Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Λ implies four prior notches. By extension, eighteen was the eighth tally after the first ten, which could be abbreviated Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X, and so was Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XΛIII. Likewise, number four on the stick was the I-notch that could be felt just before the cut of the Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Λ (Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V), so it could be written as either Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IIII or Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IΛ (Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IV). Thus the system was neither additive nor subtractive in its conception, but ordinal. When the tallies were transferred to writing, the marks were easily identified with the existing Roman letters Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X.
The tenth Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V or Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X along the stick received an extra stroke. Thus 50 was written variously as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.N, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.И, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.K, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ψ, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.⋔, etc., but perhaps most often as a chicken-track shape like a superimposed Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I: Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ↆ. This had flattened to Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ʇ (an inverted Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.T) by the time of Augustus, and soon thereafter became identified with the graphically similar letter Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.L. Likewise, 100 was variously Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ж, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.⋉, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.⋈, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.H, or as any of the symbols for 50 above plus an extra stroke. The form Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ж (that is, a superimposed Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I like: Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.𐌟) came to predominate. It was written variously as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.>I< or Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ↃIC, was then abbreviated to Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ↄ or Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.C, with Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.C variant finally winning out because, as a letter, it stood for centum, Latin for "hundred".
The hundredth Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V or Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X was marked with a box or circle. Thus 500 was like a Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ↄ superimposed on a Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.⋌ or Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.⊢, becoming Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.D or Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ð by the time of Augustus, under the graphic influence of the letter ⟨D⟩. It was later identified as the letter D; an alternative symbol for "thousand" was Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.(I) (or Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CIↃ or Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CꟾↃ), and half of a thousand or "five hundred" is the right half of the symbol, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I) (or Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IↃ or Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ꟾↃ), and this may have been converted into ⟨D⟩.[15] This at least was the etymology given to it later on.
Meanwhile, 1000 was a circled or boxed Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X: Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ⓧ, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.⊗, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.⊕, and by Augustinian times was partially identified with the Greek letter Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Φ phi. Over time, the symbol changed to Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ψ and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ↀ. The latter symbol further evolved into Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.∞, then Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.⋈, and eventually changed to Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.M under the influence of the Latin word mille "thousand".
Hand signals[]
Alfred Hooper has an alternative hypothesis for the origin of the Roman numeral system, for small numbers.[16] Hooper contends that the digits are related to hand gestures for counting. For example, the numbers Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.II, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.III, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IIII correspond to the number of fingers held up for another to see. Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V, then represents that hand upright with fingers together and thumb apart. Numbers 6–10, are represented with two hands as follows (left hand, right hand) 6=(Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V,Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I), 7=(Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V,Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.II), 8=(Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V,Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.III), 9=(Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V,Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IIII), 10=(Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V,Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V) and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X results from either crossing of the thumbs, or holding both hands up in a cross.
Another possibility is that each Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I represents a finger and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V represents the thumb of one hand. This way the numbers between 1–10 can be counted on one hand using the order: Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I=P, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.II=PR, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.III=PRM, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IV=IT, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V=T, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.VI=TP, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.VII=TPR, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.VIII=TPRM, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IX=IN, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X=N (P=Pinky, R=Ring, M=Middle, I=Index, T=Thumb N=No Fingers/Other Hand). This pattern can also be continued using the other hand with the fingers representing Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X and the thumb Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.L.
Intermediate symbols deriving from few original symbols[]
A third hypothesis about the origins states that the basic ciphers were Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.C and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Φ (or Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.⊕) and that the intermediary ones were derived from taking half of those (half an Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X is Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V, half a Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.C is Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.L and half a Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Φ/⊕ is Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.D).[17] The Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Φ was later replaced with Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.M, the initial of Mille (the Latin word for "thousand").
Middle Ages and Renaissance[]
Minuscule (lower-case) letters were developed in the Middle Ages, well after the demise of the Western Roman Empire, and since that time lower-case versions of Roman numbers have also been commonly used: Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.i, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ii, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.iii, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.iv, and so on.
Since the Middle Ages, a "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.j" has sometimes been substituted for the final "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.i" of a "lower-case" Roman numeral, such as "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.iij" for 3 or "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.vij" for 7. This "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.j" can be considered a swash variant of "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.i" (see example [1]). The use of a final "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.j" is still used in medical prescriptions to prevent tampering with or misinterpretation of a number after it is written.[18][19]
Numerals in documents and inscriptions from the Middle Ages sometimes include additional symbols, which today are called "medieval Roman numerals". Some simply substitute another letter for the standard one (such as "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.A" for "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V", or "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Q" for "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.D"), while others serve as abbreviations for compound numerals ("Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.O" for "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XI", or "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.F" for "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XL"). Although they are still listed today in some dictionaries, they are long out of use.[20]
Number | Medieval abbreviation |
Notes and etymology |
---|---|---|
5 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.A | Resembles an upside-down V. Also said to equal 500. |
6 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ↅ | Either from a ligature of Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.VI, or the Greek numeral 6: stigma (Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ϛ).[21] |
7 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.S, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Z | Presumed abbreviation of septem, Latin for 7. |
11 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.O | Presumed abbreviation of onze, French for 11. |
40 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.F | Presumed abbreviation of English forty. |
70 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.S | Also could stand for 7, with the same derivation. |
80 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.R | |
90 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.N | Presumed abbreviation of nonaginta, Latin for 90. (N.B. Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.N is also used for "nothing" (nullus)). |
150 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Y | Possibly derived from the lowercase y's shape. |
151 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.K | Unusual, origin unknown; also said to stand for 250.[22] |
160 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.T | Possibly derived from Greek tetra, as 4 × 40 = 160. |
200 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.H | Could also stand for 2 (see also 𐆙, the symbol for the dupondius). From a barring of two I's. |
250 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.E | |
300 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.B | |
400 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.P, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.G | |
500 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Q | Redundant with Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.D; abbreviates quingenti, Latin for 500. |
2000 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Z |
Chronograms, messages with dates encoded into them, were popular during the Renaissance era. The chronogram would be a phrase containing the letters Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.L, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.C, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.D, and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.M. By putting these letters together, the reader would obtain a number, usually indicating a particular year.
Modern use[]
By the 11th century, Hindu–Arabic numerals had been introduced into Europe from al-Andalus, by way of Arab traders and arithmetic treatises. Roman numerals, however, proved very persistent, remaining in common use in the West well into the 14th and 15th centuries, even in accounting and other business records (where the actual calculations would have been made using an abacus). Replacement by their more convenient "Arabic" equivalents was quite gradual, and Roman numerals are still used today in certain contexts. A few examples of their current use are:
Spanish Real using "IIII" instead of "IV" as regnal number of Charles IV of Spain
- Names of monarchs and popes, e.g. Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom, Pope Benedict XVI. These are referred to as regnal numbers; e.g. Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.II is pronounced "the second". This tradition began in Europe sporadically in the Middle Ages, gaining widespread use in England only during the reign of Henry VIII. Previously, the monarch was not known by numeral but by an epithet such as Edward the Confessor. Some monarchs (e.g. Charles IV of Spain and Louis XIV of France) seem to have preferred the use of Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IIII instead of Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IV on their coinage (see illustration).
- Generational suffixes, particularly in the US, for people sharing the same name across generations, for example William Howard Taft IV.
- In the French Republican Calendar, initiated during the French Revolution, years were numbered by Roman numerals – from the year I (1792) when this calendar was introduced to the year XIV (1805) when it was abandoned.
- The year of production of films, television shows and other works of art within the work itself. It has been suggested – by BBC News, perhaps facetiously – that this was originally done "in an attempt to disguise the age of films or television programmes."[23] Outside reference to the work will use regular Hindu–Arabic numerals.
- Hour marks on timepieces. In this context, 4 is usually written Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IIII.
- The year of construction on building faces and cornerstones.
- Page numbering of prefaces and introductions of books, and sometimes of annexes, too.
- Book volume and chapter numbers, as well as the several acts within a play (e.g. Act iii, Scene 2).
- Sequels of some movies, video games, and other works (as in Rocky II).
- Outlines that use numbers to show hierarchical relationships.
- Occurrences of a recurring grand event, for instance:
- The Summer and Winter Olympic Games (e.g. the Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XXI Olympic Winter Games; the Games of the Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XXX Olympiad)
- The Super Bowl, the annual championship game of the National Football League (e.g. Super Bowl Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XXXVII; Super Bowl 50 is a one-time exception[24])
- WrestleMania, the annual professional wrestling event for the WWE (e.g. WrestleMania Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XXX). This usage has also been inconsistent.
Specific disciplines[]
Entrance to section Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.LII (52) of the Colosseum, with numerals still visible
In astronomy, the natural satellites or "moons" of the planets are traditionally designated by capital Roman numerals appended to the planet’s name. For example, Titan's designation is Saturn Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.VI.
In chemistry, Roman numerals are often used to denote the groups of the periodic table. They are also used in the IUPAC nomenclature of inorganic chemistry, for the oxidation number of cations which can take on several different positive charges. They are also used for naming phases of polymorphic crystals, such as ice.
In computing, Roman numerals may be used in identifiers which are limited to alphabetic characters by syntactic constraints of the programming language. In LaTeX, for instance, \labelitemiii
refers to the label of an item in the third level Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.iii of a nested list environment.
In military unit designation, Roman numerals are often used to distinguish between units at different levels. This reduces possible confusion, especially when viewing operational or strategic level maps. In particular, army corps are often numbered using Roman numerals (for example the American XVIII Airborne Corps or the WW2-era German III Panzerkorps) with Hindu-Arabic numerals being used for divisions and armies.
In music, Roman numerals are used in several contexts:
- Movements are often numbered using Roman numerals.
- In music theory, the diatonic functions are identified using Roman numerals. (See: Roman numeral analysis)
- Individual strings of stringed instruments, such as the violin, are often denoted by Roman numerals, with higher numbers denoting lower strings.
In pharmacy, Roman numerals are used in some contexts, including Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.S to denote "one half" and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.N to mean "nothing".[25] (See the sections below on "zero" and "fractions".)
In photography, Roman numerals (with zero) are used to denote varying levels of brightness when using the Zone System.
In seismology, Roman numerals are used to designate degrees of the Mercalli intensity scale of earthquakes.
In tarot, Roman numerals (with zero) are used to denote the cards of the Major Arcana.
In theology and biblical scholarship, the Septuagint is often referred to as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.LXX, as this translation of the Old Testament into Greek is named for the legendary number of its translators (septuaginta being Latin for "seventy").
In entomology, the broods of the thirteen and seventeen year periodical cicadas are identified by Roman numerals.
In advanced mathematics (including trigonometry, statistics, and calculus), when a graph includes negative numbers, its quadrants are named using Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.II, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.III, and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IV. These quadrant names signify positive numbers on both axes, negative numbers on the X axis, negative numbers on both axes, and negative numbers on the Y axis, respectively. The use of Roman numerals to designate quadrants avoids confusion, since Hindu-Arabic numerals are used for the actual data represented in the graph.
Modern use in continental Europe[]
Some uses that are rare or never seen in English speaking countries are relatively common in continental Europe. For instance:
Capital or small capital Roman numerals are widely used in Romance languages to denote centuries, e.g. the French xviiie siècle[26] and the Spanish siglo XVIII mean "18th century". Slavic languages in and adjacent to Russia similarly favour Roman numerals (XVIII век). On the other hand, in Slavic languages in Central Europe, like most Germanic languages, one writes "18." (with a period) before the local word for "century".
Boris Yeltsin's signature, dated 10 November 1988. The month is specified by "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XI" rather than "11".
Mixed Roman and Hindu-Arabic numerals are sometimes used in numeric representations of dates (especially in formal letters and official documents, but also on tombstones). The month is written in Roman numerals, while the day is in Hindu-Arabic numerals: "14.Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.VI.1789" and "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.VI.14.1789" both refer unambiguously to 14 June 1789.
Timetable on a shop window in Vilnius
Roman numerals are sometimes used to represent the days of the week in hours-of-operation signs displayed in windows or on doors of businesses,[27] and also sometimes in railway and bus timetables. Monday, taken as the first day of the week, is represented by Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I. Sunday is represented by Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.VII. The hours of operation signs are tables composed of two columns where the left column is the day of the week in Roman numerals and the right column is a range of hours of operation from starting time to closing time. In the example case (left), the business opens from 10 AM to 7 PM on weekdays, 10 AM to 5 PM on Saturdays and is closed on Sundays. Note that the listing uses 24-hour time.
Sign at 17.9 km on route SS4 Salaria, north of Rome
Roman numerals may also be used for floor numbering.[28][29] For instance, apartments in central Amsterdam are indicated as 138-Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.III, with both a Hindu-Arabic numeral (number of the block or house) and a Roman numeral (floor number). The apartment on the ground floor is indicated as '138-huis'.
In Italy, where roads outside built-up areas have kilometre signs, major roads and motorways also mark 100-metre subdivisionals, using Roman numerals from Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.I to Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IX for the smaller intervals. The sign "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IX | 17" thus marks kilometre 17.9.
A notable exception to the use of Roman numerals in Europe is in Greece, where Greek numerals (based on the Greek alphabet) are generally used in contexts where Roman numerals would be used elsewhere.
Special values[]
Zero[]
The number zero does not have its own Roman numeral, but the word nulla (the Latin word meaning "none") was used by medieval scholars in lieu of 0. Dionysius Exiguus was known to use nulla alongside Roman numerals in 525.[30][31] About 725, Bede or one of his colleagues used the letter N, the initial of nulla or of nihil (the Latin word for "nothing"), in a table of epacts, all written in Roman numerals.[32]
Fractions[]
A triens coin (1/3 or 4/12 of an as). Note the four dots •••• indicating its value.
A semis coin (1/2 or 6/12 of an as). Note the S indicating its value.
Though the Romans used a decimal system for whole numbers, reflecting how they counted in Latin, they used a duodecimal system for fractions, because the divisibility of twelve (12 = 22 × 3) makes it easier to handle the common fractions of 1/3 and 1/4 than does a system based on ten (10 = 2 × 5). On coins, many of which had values that were duodecimal fractions of the unit as, they used a tally-like notational system based on twelfths and halves. A dot (•) indicated an uncia "twelfth", the source of the English words inch and ounce; dots were repeated for fractions up to five twelfths. Six twelfths (one half) was abbreviated as the letter S for semis "half". Uncia dots were added to S for fractions from seven to eleven twelfths, just as tallies were added to Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.V for whole numbers from six to nine.[33]
Each fraction from 1/12 to 12/12 had a name in Roman times; these corresponded to the names of the related coins:
Fraction | Roman numeral | Name (nominative and genitive) | Meaning |
---|---|---|---|
1/12 | • | Uncia, unciae | "Ounce" |
2/12 = 1/6 | •• or : | Sextans, sextantis | "Sixth" |
3/12 = 1/4 | ••• or ∴ | Quadrans, quadrantis | "Quarter" |
4/12 = 1/3 | •••• or :: | Triens, trientis | "Third" |
5/12 | ••••• or :·: | Quincunx, quincuncis | "Five-ounce" (quinque unciae → quincunx) |
6/12 = 1/2 | S | Semis, semissis | "Half" |
7/12 | S• | Septunx, septuncis | "Seven-ounce" (septem unciae → septunx) |
8/12 = 2/3 | S•• or S: | Bes, bessis | "Twice" (as in "twice a third") |
9/12 = 3/4 | S••• or S:· | Dodrans, dodrantis or nonuncium, nonuncii |
"Less a quarter" (de-quadrans → dodrans) or "ninth ounce" (nona uncia → nonuncium) |
10/12 = 5/6 | S•••• or S:: | Dextans, dextantis or decunx, decuncis |
"Less a sixth" (de-sextans → dextans) or "ten ounces" (decem unciae → decunx) |
11/12 | S••••• or S:·: | Deunx, deuncis | "Less an ounce" (de-uncia → deunx) |
12/12 = 1 | I | As, assis | "Unit" |
The arrangement of the dots was variable and not necessarily linear. Five dots arranged like (⁙) (as on the face of a die) are known as a quincunx, from the name of the Roman fraction/coin. The Latin words sextans and quadrans are the source of the English words sextant and quadrant.
Other Roman fractional notations included the following:
- 1/8 sescuncia, sescunciae (from sesqui- + uncia, i.e. 1½ uncias), represented by a sequence of the symbols for the semuncia and the uncia.
- 1/24 semuncia, semunciae (from semi- + uncia, i.e. ½ uncia), represented by several variant glyphs deriving from the shape of the Greek letter sigma (Σ), one variant resembling the pound sign (£) without the horizontal line(s) and another resembling the Cyrillic letter Є.
- 1/36 binae sextulae, binarum sextularum ("two sextulas") or duella, duellae, represented by a sequence of two reversed Ss (ƧƧ).
- 1/48 sicilicus, sicilici, represented by a reversed C (Ɔ).
- 1/72 sextula, sextulae (1/6 of an uncia), represented by a reversed S (Ƨ).
- 1/144 = 12−2 dimidia sextula, dimidiae sextulae ("half a sextula"), represented by a reversed S crossed by a horizontal line (𐆔).
- 1/288 scripulum, scripuli (a scruple), represented by the symbol ℈.
- 1/1728 = 12−3 siliqua, siliquae, represented by a symbol resembling closing guillemets (𐆕).
Large numbers[]
A number of systems were developed for the expression of larger numbers that cannot be conveniently expressed using the normal seven letter symbols of conventional Roman numerals.
"1630" on the Westerkerk in Amsterdam, with the date expressed in "apostrophus" notation.
Apostrophus[]
One of these was the apostrophus,[34] in which 500 (usually written as "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.D") was written as |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ, while 1,000 was written as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.C|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ instead of "Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.M".[15] This is a system of encasing numbers to denote thousands (the Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Cs and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔs functioned in this case as the Roman equivalent of parentheses), and has its origins in Etruscan numeral usage. Each extra set of Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.C combined with Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ, raises Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.C|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ by a factor of ten, for example, Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CC|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆ is 10,000 and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CCC|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆƆ is 100,000. Whereas the |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ (representing 500) is raised by a factor of ten by combining it with a Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ, for example, |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆ is 5,000, and |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆƆ is 5,000. The Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.D and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.M used to represent 500 and 1,000 in conventional Roman numerals were probably derived from |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.C|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ, respectively.
For example:
Base number | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.C|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ = 1,000 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CC|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆ = 10,000 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CCC|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆƆ = 100,000 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
with |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ | |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ = 500 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.C|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ = 1,500 (broken down as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.C|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ plus |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ) | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CC|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆ|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ = 10,500 (broken down as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CC|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆ plus |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ) | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CCC|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆƆ|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ = 100,500 (broken down as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CCC|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆƆ plus |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ) |
with |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆ | |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆ = 5,000 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CC|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆ|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆ = 15,000 (broken down as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CC|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆ plus |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆ) | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CCC|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆƆ|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆ = 105,000 (broken down as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CCC|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆƆ plus |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆ) | |
with |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆƆ | |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆƆ = 50,000 | Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CCC|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆƆ|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆƆ = 150,000 (broken down as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CCC|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆƆ plus |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆƆ) |
Sometimes Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.C|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Ɔ was reduced to ↀ for 1,000. John Wallis is often credited for introducing the symbol for infinity (modern ∞), and one conjecture is that he based it on this usage, since 1,000 was hyperbolically used to represent very large numbers. Similarly, |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆ for 5,000 was reduced to ↁ; Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CC|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆ for 10,000 to ↂ; |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆƆ for 50,000 to ↇ; and Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.CCC|Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.ƆƆƆ for 100,000 to ↈ.[14]
Page from a 16th-century manual, showing a mixture of apostrophus and vinculum numbers (see in particular the ways of writing 10,000).
Vinculum[]
Another system is the vinculum, where a conventional Roman numeral is multiplied by 1,000 by adding an overline.[14] Although mathematical historian David Eugene Smith disputes that this was part of ancient Roman usage,[35] the notation was certainly in use in the Middle Ages, and is at least a convenient and "conventional" way to express numbers greater than 3,999 in Roman numerals.
For instance:
- Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.IV for 4,000
- Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XXV for 25,000
Adding vertical lines (or brackets) before and after the numeral seems to have been used (at least by late medieval times) to multiply a Roman numeral by 10: thus |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.M| for 10,000 rather than Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.X (perhaps under the influence of Arabic/Hindu numerals, which were by this time coming into use). In combination with the overline the bracketed forms might be used to raise the multiplier to (say) ten (or one hundred) thousand, thus:
- |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.VIII| for 80,000 (or 800,000)
- |Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.XX| for 200,000 (or 2,000,000)
This needs to be distinguished from the custom of adding both underline and overline to a Roman numeral, simply to make it clear that it is a number, e.g. Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.MCMLXVII.
See also[]
- Egyptian numerals
- Etruscan numerals
- Kharosthi numerals
- Roman abacus
- Proto-writing
- Roman numerals in Unicode
- Pentimal system
References[]
- ↑ Gordon, Arthur E. (1982). Illustrated Introduction to Latin Epigraphy. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0520050797. "Alphabetic symbols for larger numbers, such as Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.Q for 500,000, have also been used to various degrees of standardization."
- ↑ Reddy, Indra K.; Khan, Mansoor A. (2003). Essential Math and Calculations for Pharmacy Technicians. CRC Press. ISBN 9780203495346. https://books.google.com/books?id=U3QY7gz0C2cC.
- ↑ Dela Cruz, M. L. P.; Torres, H. D. (2009). Number Smart Quest for Mastery: Teacher's Edition. Rex Bookstore, Inc.. ISBN 9789712352164. https://books.google.com/books?id=PVK6lt2xXz4C.
- ↑ Martelli, Alex; Ascher, David (2002). Python Cookbook. O'Reilly Media Inc.. ISBN 9780596001674. https://books.google.com/books?id=yhfdQgq8JF4C.
- ↑ "What book is the Statue of Liberty holding? What is its significance?". Quora.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Hayes, David P. "Guide to Roman Numerals". Copyright Registration and Renewal Information Chart and Web Site.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Adams, Cecil (February 23, 1990). "What is the proper way to style Roman numerals for the 1990s?". The Straight Dope.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Reynolds, Joyce Maire; Spawforth, Anthony J. S. (1996). "numbers, Roman". In Hornblower, Simon; Spawforth, Anthony. Oxford Classical Dictionary (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-866172-X.
- ↑ Kennedy, Benjamin Hall (1923). The Revised Latin Primer. London: Longmans, Green & Co.
- ↑ Milham, W.I. (1947). Time & Timekeepers. New York: Macmillan. p. 196.
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 Pickover, Clifford A. (2003), Wonders of Numbers: Adventures in Mathematics, Mind, and Meaning, Oxford University Press, p. 282, ISBN 9780195348002, https://books.google.com/books?id=52N0JJBspM0C&pg=PA282.
- ↑ Adams, Cecil; Zotti, Ed (1988). More of the straight dope. Ballantine Books. p. 154. ISBN 9780345351456..
- ↑ "Gallery: Museum's North Entrance (1910)". Saint Louis Art Museum. Archived from the original on August 23, 2014. Retrieved January 10, 2014.
The inscription over the North Entrance to the Museum reads: "Dedicated to Art and Free to All · Page Template:Rn/styles.css has no content.MDCDIII". These Roman numerals translate to 1903, indicating that the engraving was part of the original building designed for the 1904 World's Fair.
{{cite web}}
: ; deadurl - ↑ 14.0 14.1 14.2 Ifrah, Georges (2000). The Universal History of Numbers: From Prehistory to the Invention of the Computer. Translated by David Bellos, E. F. Harding, Sophie Wood, Ian Monk. John Wiley & Sons.
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 Asimov, Isaac (1977) [1966]. Asimov On Numbers. Pocket Books, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc. p. 9.
- ↑ Alfred Hooper. The River Mathematics (New York, H. Holt, 1945).
- ↑ Keyser, Paul (1988). "The Origin of the Latin Numerals 1 to 1000". American Journal of Archaeology 92: 529–546. JSTOR 505248.
- ↑ Sturmer, Julius W. Course in Pharmaceutical and Chemical Arithmetic, 3rd ed. (LaFayette, IN: Burt-Terry-Wilson, 1906). p25 Retrieved on 2010-03-15.
- ↑ Bastedo, Walter A. Materia Medica: Pharmacology, Therapeutics and Prescription Writing for Students and Practitioners, 2nd ed. (Philadelphia, PA: W.B. Saunders, 1919) p582 Retrieved on 2010-03-15.
- ↑ Capelli, A. Dictionary of Latin Abbreviations. 1912.
- ↑ Perry, David J. Proposal to Add Additional Ancient Roman Characters to UCS.
- ↑ Bang, Jørgen. Fremmedordbog, Berlingske Ordbøger, 1962 (Danish)
- ↑ Owen, Rob (2012-01-13). "TV Q&A: ABC News, 'Storage Wars' and 'The Big Bang Theory'". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. http://communityvoices.sites.post-gazette.com/index.php/arts-entertainment-living/tuned-in-journal/31514-tv-qaa-abc-news-storage-wars-and-the-big-bang-theory. Retrieved 2012-01-13.
- ↑ NFL won't use Roman numerals for Super Bowl 50, nfl.com, Retrieved November 5, 2014
- ↑ Bachenheimer, Bonnie S. (2010). Manual for Pharmacy Technicians. ISBN 158528307X.
- ↑ (in French) Lexique des règles typographiques en usage à l'imprimerie nationale (6th ed.). Paris: Imprimerie nationale. March 2011. pp. 126. ISBN 978-2-7433-0482-9. On composera en chiffres romains petites capitales les nombres concernant : ↲ 1. Les siècles.
- ↑ Beginners latin, Nationalarchives.gov.uk, Retrieved December 1, 2013
- ↑ Roman Arithmetic, Southwestern Adventist University, Retrieved December 1, 2013
- ↑ Roman Numerals History, Retrieved December 1, 2013
- ↑ Faith Wallis, trans. Bede: The Reckoning of Time (725), Liverpool: Liverpool Univ. Pr., 2004. ISBN 0-85323-693-3.
- ↑ Byrhtferth's Enchiridion (1016). Edited by Peter S. Baker and Michael Lapidge. Early English Text Society 1995. ISBN 978-0-19-722416-8.
- ↑ C. W. Jones, ed., Opera Didascalica, vol. 123C in Corpus Christianorum, Series Latina.
- ↑ Maher, David W.; Makowski, John F., "Literary Evidence for Roman Arithmetic with Fractions", Classical Philology 96 (2011): 376–399.
- ↑ "Merriam-Webster Unabridged Dictionary".
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Smith, David Eugene (1958) [1925], History of Mathematics, II, p. 60, ISBN 0-486-20430-8
Sources[]
- Menninger, Karl (1992). Number Words and Number Symbols: A Cultural History of Numbers. Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-27096-8.
- Books about Roman numerals: Online books, Resources in your library, Resources in other libraries
Further reading[]
- Aczel, Amir D. 2015. Finding Zero: A Mathematician's Odyssey to Uncover the Origins of Numbers. 1st edition. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Goines, David Lance. A Constructed Roman Alphabet: A Geometric Analysis of the Greek and Roman Capitals and of the Arabic Numerals. Boston: D.R. Godine, 1982.
- Houston, Stephen D. 2012. The Shape of Script: How and Why Writing Systems Change. Santa Fe, NM: School for Advanced Research Press.
- Taisbak, Christian M. 1965. "Roman numerals and the abacus." Classica et medievalia 26: 147–60.
External links[]
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