fbpx
Wikipedia

Greek numerals

Greek numerals, also known as Ionic, Ionian, Milesian, or Alexandrian numerals, are a system of writing numbers using the letters of the Greek alphabet. In modern Greece, they are still used for ordinal numbers and in contexts similar to those in which Roman numerals are still used in the Western world. For ordinary cardinal numbers, however, modern Greece uses Arabic numerals.

History

The Minoan and Mycenaean civilizations' Linear A and Linear B alphabets used a different system, called Aegean numerals, which included number-only symbols for powers of ten: 𐄇 = 1, 𐄐 = 10, 𐄙 = 100, 𐄢 = 1000, and 𐄫 = 10000.[1]

Attic numerals comprised another system that came into use perhaps in the 7th century BCE. They were acrophonic, derived (after the initial one) from the first letters of the names of the numbers represented. They ran   = 1,   = 5,   = 10,   = 100,   = 1,000, and   = 10,000. The numbers 50, 500, 5,000, and 50,000 were represented by the letter   with minuscule powers of ten written in the top right corner:  ,  ,  , and  .[1] One-half was represented by 𐅁 (left half of a full circle) and one-quarter by the right side of the circle. The same system was used outside of Attica, but the symbols varied with the local alphabets, for example, 1,000 was   in Boeotia.[2]

The present system probably developed around Miletus in Ionia. 19th century classicists placed its development in the 3rd century BCE, the occasion of its first widespread use.[3] More thorough modern archaeology has caused the date to be pushed back at least to the 5th century BCE,[4] a little before Athens abandoned its pre-Euclidean alphabet in favour of Miletus's in 402 BCE, and it may predate that by a century or two.[5] The present system uses the 24 letters used by Euclid, as well as three Phoenician and Ionic ones that had not been dropped from the Athenian alphabet (although kept for numbers): digamma, koppa, and sampi. The position of those characters within the numbering system imply that the first two were still in use (or at least remembered as letters) while the third was not. The exact dating, particularly for sampi, is problematic since its uncommon value means the first attested representative near Miletus does not appear until the 2nd century BCE,[6] and its use is unattested in Athens until the 2nd century CE.[7] (In general, Athenians resisted using the new numerals for the longest of any Greek state, but had fully adopted them by c. 50 CE.[2])

Description

 
Greek numerals in a c. 1100 Byzantine manuscript of Hero of Alexandria's Metrika. The first line contains the number "͵θϡϟϛ δʹ ϛʹ", i.e. "9,996 + 14 + 16". It features each of the special numeral symbols sampi (ϡ), koppa (ϟ), and stigma (ϛ) in their minuscule forms.

Greek numerals are decimal, based on powers of 10. The units from 1 to 9 are assigned to the first nine letters of the old Ionic alphabet from alpha to theta. Instead of reusing these numbers to form multiples of the higher powers of ten, however, each multiple of ten from 10 to 90 was assigned its own separate letter from the next nine letters of the Ionic alphabet from iota to koppa. Each multiple of one hundred from 100 to 900 was then assigned its own separate letter as well, from rho to sampi.[8] (That this was not the traditional location of sampi in the Ionic alphabetical order has led classicists to conclude that sampi had fallen into disuse as a letter by the time the system was created.[citation needed])

This alphabetic system operates on the additive principle in which the numeric values of the letters are added together to obtain the total. For example, 241 was represented as     (200 + 40 + 1). (It was not always the case that the numbers ran from highest to lowest: a 4th-century BC inscription at Athens placed the units to the left of the tens. This practice continued in Asia Minor well into the Roman period.[9]) In ancient and medieval manuscripts, these numerals were eventually distinguished from letters using overbars: α, β, γ, etc. In medieval manuscripts of the Book of Revelation, the number of the Beast 666 is written as χξϛ (600 + 60 + 6). (Numbers larger than 1,000 reused the same letters but included various marks to note the change.) Fractions were indicated as the denominator followed by a keraia (ʹ); γʹ indicated one third, δʹ one fourth and so on. As an exception, special symbol ∠ʹ indicated one half, and γ°ʹ or γoʹ was two-thirds. These fractions were additive (also known as Egyptian fractions); for example δʹ ϛʹ indicated 14 + 16 = 512.

 
A 14th-century Byzantine map of the British Isles from a manuscript of Ptolemy's Geography, using Greek numerals for its graticule: 52–63°N of the equator and 6–33°E from Ptolemy's Prime Meridian at the Fortunate Isles.

Although the Greek alphabet began with only majuscule forms, surviving papyrus manuscripts from Egypt show that uncial and cursive minuscule forms began early.[clarification needed] These new letter forms sometimes replaced the former ones, especially in the case of the obscure numerals. The old Q-shaped koppa (Ϙ) began to be broken up (  and  ) and simplified (  and  ). The numeral for 6 changed several times. During antiquity, the original letter form of digamma (Ϝ) came to be avoided in favour of a special numerical one ( ). By the Byzantine era, the letter was known as episemon and written as   or  . This eventually merged with the sigma-tau ligature stigma ϛ (  or  ).

In modern Greek, a number of other changes have been made. Instead of extending an over bar over an entire number, the keraia (κεραία, lit. "hornlike projection") is marked to its upper right, a development of the short marks formerly used for single numbers and fractions. The modern keraia (´) is a symbol similar to the acute accent (´), the tonos (U+0384,΄) and the prime symbol (U+02B9, ʹ), but has its own Unicode character as U+0374. Alexander the Great's father Philip II of Macedon is thus known as Φίλιππος Βʹ in modern Greek. A lower left keraia (Unicode: U+0375, "Greek Lower Numeral Sign") is now standard for distinguishing thousands: 2019 is represented as ͵ΒΙΘʹ (2 × 1,000 + 10 + 9).

The declining use of ligatures in the 20th century also means that stigma is frequently written as the separate letters ΣΤʹ, although a single keraia is used for the group.[10]

Isopsephy

The practice of adding up the number values of Greek letters of words, names and phrases, thus connecting the meaning of words, names and phrases with others with equivalent numeric sums, is called isopsephy. A similar practice adapted for the Hebrew alphabet is referred to as gematria.

Table

Ancient Byzantine Modern Value Ancient Byzantine Modern Value Ancient Byzantine Modern Value
  α Αʹ 1   ι Ιʹ 10   ρ Ρʹ 100
  β Βʹ 2   κ Κʹ 20   σ Σʹ 200
  γ Γʹ 3   λ Λʹ 30   τ Τʹ 300
  δ Δʹ 4   μ Μʹ 40   υ Υʹ 400
  ε Εʹ 5   ν Νʹ 50   φ Φʹ 500
 
 
  and  
  and  
Ϛʹ
Ϝʹ
ΣΤʹ
6   ξ Ξʹ 60   χ Χʹ 600
  ζ Ζʹ 7   ο Οʹ 70   ψ Ψʹ 700
  η Ηʹ 8   π Πʹ 80   ω Ωʹ 800
  θ Θʹ 9  
 
  and  
  and  
Ϟʹ
Ϙʹ
90  
  and  
  and  
  and  
 
  and  
  and  
 
Ϡʹ
Ͳʹ
900
  and   ͵α 1000    ͵ι 10000    ͵ρ 100000
   ͵β 2000    ͵κ 20000    ͵σ 200000
   ͵  3000    ͵λ 30000    ͵τ 300000
   ͵  4000    ͵μ 40000    ͵υ 400000
   ͵ε 5000    ͵ν 50000    ͵φ 500000
  
  
͵  and ͵ 
͵  and ͵ 


,ΣΤ
6000    ͵ξ 60000    ͵χ 600000
   ͵ζ 7000    ͵ο 70000    ͵ψ 700000
   ͵η 8000    ͵π 80000    ͵ω 800000
  ͵θ 9000   
  
͵  and ͵ 
͵  and ͵ 

90000   
   and   
   and   
͵  and ͵ 
͵ 
͵  and ͵ 
͵  and ͵ 
͵ 

900000
  • Alternatively, sub-sections of manuscripts are sometimes numbered by lowercase characters (αʹ. βʹ. γʹ. δʹ. εʹ. ϛʹ. ζʹ. ηʹ. θʹ.).
  • In Ancient Greek, myriad notation is used for multiples of 10,000, for example βΜ for 20,000 or ρκγΜ͵δφξζ (also written on the line as ρκγΜ ͵δφξζ) for 1,234,567.[11]

Higher numbers

In his text The Sand Reckoner, the natural philosopher Archimedes gives an upper bound of the number of grains of sand required to fill the entire universe, using a contemporary estimation of its size. This would defy the then-held notion that it is impossible to name a number greater than that of the sand on a beach or on the entire world. In order to do that, he had to devise a new numeral scheme with much greater range.

Pappus of Alexandria reports that Apollonius of Perga developed a simpler system based on powers of the myriad; αΜ was 10,000, βΜ was 10,0002 = 100,000,000, γΜ was 10,0003 = 1012 and so on.[11]

Zero

 
Example of the early Greek symbol for zero (lower right corner) from a 2nd-century papyrus

Hellenistic astronomers extended alphabetic Greek numerals into a sexagesimal positional numbering system by limiting each position to a maximum value of 50 + 9 and including a special symbol for zero, which was only used alone for a whole table cell, rather than combined with other digits, like today's modern zero, which is a placeholder in positional numeric notation. This system was probably adapted from Babylonian numerals by Hipparchus c. 140 BC. It was then used by Ptolemy (c. 140), Theon (c. 380) and Theon's daughter Hypatia (died 415). The symbol for zero is clearly different from that of the value for 70, omicron or "ο". In the 2nd-century papyrus shown here, one can see the symbol for zero in the lower right, and a number of larger omicrons elsewhere in the same papyrus.

In Ptolemy's table of chords, the first fairly extensive trigonometric table, there were 360 rows, portions of which looked as follows:

 

Each number in the first column, labeled περιφερειῶν, is the number of degrees of arc on a circle. Each number in the second column, labeled εὐθειῶν, is the length of the corresponding chord of the circle, when the diameter is 120. Thus πδ represents an 84° arc, and the ∠′ after it means one-half, so that πδ∠′ means 84+12°. In the next column we see π μα γ , meaning   80 + 41/60 + 3/60². That is the length of the chord corresponding to an arc of 84+12° when the diameter of the circle is 120. The next column, labeled ἐξηκοστῶν, for "sixtieths", is the number to be added to the chord length for each 1° increase in the arc, over the span of the next 12°. Thus that last column was used for linear interpolation.

The Greek sexagesimal placeholder or zero symbol changed over time: The symbol used on papyri during the second century was a very small circle with an overbar several diameters long, terminated or not at both ends in various ways. Later, the overbar shortened to only one diameter, similar to the modern o-macron (ō) which was still being used in late medieval Arabic manuscripts whenever alphabetic numerals were used. But the overbar was omitted in Byzantine manuscripts, leaving a bare ο (omicron). This gradual change from an invented symbol to ο does not support the hypothesis that the latter was the initial of οὐδέν meaning "nothing".[12][13] Note that the letter ο was still used with its original numerical value of 70; however, there was no ambiguity, as 70 could not appear in the fractional part of a sexagesimal number, and zero was usually omitted when it was the integer.

Some of Ptolemy's true zeros appeared in the first line of each of his eclipse tables, where they were a measure of the angular separation between the center of the Moon and either the center of the Sun (for solar eclipses) or the center of Earth's shadow (for lunar eclipses). All of these zeros took the form ο | ο ο, where Ptolemy actually used three of the symbols described in the previous paragraph. The vertical bar (|) indicates that the integral part on the left was in a separate column labeled in the headings of his tables as digits (of five arc-minutes each), whereas the fractional part was in the next column labeled minute of immersion, meaning sixtieths (and thirty-six-hundredths) of a digit.[14]

Character information
Preview 𐆊
Unicode name GREEK ZERO SIGN
Encodings decimal hex
Unicode 65930 U+1018A
UTF-8 240 144 134 138 F0 90 86 8A
UTF-16 55296 56714 D800 DD8A
Numeric character reference 𐆊 𐆊

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Verdan, Samuel (20 March 2007). (in French). Archived from the original on 2 February 2010. Retrieved 2 March 2011.
  2. ^ a b Heath, Thomas L. (2003) [1931]. A Manual of Greek Mathematics ([2003] reprint ed.). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press[1931]; Dover Books[2003]. pp. 14 ff. ISBN 9780486154442. Retrieved 1 November 2013 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Thompson, Edward M. (1893). Handbook of Greek and Latin Palaeography. New York, NY: D. Appleton. p. 114.
  4. ^ "IG I³ 1387". Searchable Greek Inscriptions. The Packard Humanities Institute. Cornell University & Ohio State University. IG I³ 1387  also known as  IG I² 760. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
  5. ^ Jeffery, Lilian H. (1961). The Local Scripts of Archaic Greece. Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press. pp. 38 ff.
  6. ^ "Magnesia 4". Searchable Greek Inscriptions. The Packard Humanities Institute. Cornell University & Ohio State University. Magnesia 4  also known as  Syll³ 695.b. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
  7. ^ "IG II² 2776". Searchable Greek Inscriptions. The Packard Humanities Institute. Cornell University & Ohio State University. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
  8. ^ Edkins, Jo (2006). . Archived from the original on 10 May 2013. Retrieved 29 April 2013.
  9. ^ Heath, Thomas L. A Manual of Greek Mathematics, pp. 14 ff. Oxford Univ. Press (Oxford), 1931. Reprinted Dover (Mineola), 2003. Accessed 1 November 2013.
  10. ^ Nick Nicholas (9 April 2005). "Numerals: Stigma, Koppa, Sampi". Archived from the original on 5 August 2012. Retrieved 2 March 2011.
  11. ^ a b Greek number systems - MacTutor
  12. ^ Neugebauer, Otto (1969) [1957]. The Exact Sciences in Antiquity (2, reprint ed.). Dover Publications. pp. 13–14, plate 2. ISBN 978-0-486-22332-2.
  13. ^ Mercier, Raymond. "Consideration of the Greek symbol 'zero'" (PDF). — gives numerous examples
  14. ^ Ptolemy, Claudius (1998) [100–170 CE]. "Book VI". Ptolemy's Almagest. Translated by Toomer, G.J. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 306–307.

External links

  • The Greek Number Converter

greek, numerals, numerical, signs, redirect, here, accent, mark, acute, accent, this, article, contains, special, characters, without, proper, rendering, support, question, marks, boxes, other, symbols, also, known, ionic, ionian, milesian, alexandrian, numera. The numerical signs ʹ and redirect here For the accent mark see Acute accent This article contains special characters Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols Greek numerals also known as Ionic Ionian Milesian or Alexandrian numerals are a system of writing numbers using the letters of the Greek alphabet In modern Greece they are still used for ordinal numbers and in contexts similar to those in which Roman numerals are still used in the Western world For ordinary cardinal numbers however modern Greece uses Arabic numerals Contents 1 History 2 Description 3 Isopsephy 4 Table 5 Higher numbers 6 Zero 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditThe Minoan and Mycenaean civilizations Linear A and Linear B alphabets used a different system called Aegean numerals which included number only symbols for powers of ten 1 10 100 1000 and 10000 1 Attic numerals comprised another system that came into use perhaps in the 7th century BCE They were acrophonic derived after the initial one from the first letters of the names of the numbers represented They ran 1 5 10 100 1 000 and 10 000 The numbers 50 500 5 000 and 50 000 were represented by the letter with minuscule powers of ten written in the top right corner and 1 One half was represented by left half of a full circle and one quarter by the right side of the circle The same system was used outside of Attica but the symbols varied with the local alphabets for example 1 000 was in Boeotia 2 The present system probably developed around Miletus in Ionia 19th century classicists placed its development in the 3rd century BCE the occasion of its first widespread use 3 More thorough modern archaeology has caused the date to be pushed back at least to the 5th century BCE 4 a little before Athens abandoned its pre Euclidean alphabet in favour of Miletus s in 402 BCE and it may predate that by a century or two 5 The present system uses the 24 letters used by Euclid as well as three Phoenician and Ionic ones that had not been dropped from the Athenian alphabet although kept for numbers digamma koppa and sampi The position of those characters within the numbering system imply that the first two were still in use or at least remembered as letters while the third was not The exact dating particularly for sampi is problematic since its uncommon value means the first attested representative near Miletus does not appear until the 2nd century BCE 6 and its use is unattested in Athens until the 2nd century CE 7 In general Athenians resisted using the new numerals for the longest of any Greek state but had fully adopted them by c 50 CE 2 Description Edit Greek numerals in a c 1100 Byzantine manuscript of Hero of Alexandria s Metrika The first line contains the number 8ϡϟϛ dʹ ϛʹ i e 9 996 1 4 1 6 It features each of the special numeral symbols sampi ϡ koppa ϟ and stigma ϛ in their minuscule forms Greek numerals are decimal based on powers of 10 The units from 1 to 9 are assigned to the first nine letters of the old Ionic alphabet from alpha to theta Instead of reusing these numbers to form multiples of the higher powers of ten however each multiple of ten from 10 to 90 was assigned its own separate letter from the next nine letters of the Ionic alphabet from iota to koppa Each multiple of one hundred from 100 to 900 was then assigned its own separate letter as well from rho to sampi 8 That this was not the traditional location of sampi in the Ionic alphabetical order has led classicists to conclude that sampi had fallen into disuse as a letter by the time the system was created citation needed This alphabetic system operates on the additive principle in which the numeric values of the letters are added together to obtain the total For example 241 was represented as 200 40 1 It was not always the case that the numbers ran from highest to lowest a 4th century BC inscription at Athens placed the units to the left of the tens This practice continued in Asia Minor well into the Roman period 9 In ancient and medieval manuscripts these numerals were eventually distinguished from letters using overbars a b g etc In medieval manuscripts of the Book of Revelation the number of the Beast 666 is written as x3ϛ 600 60 6 Numbers larger than 1 000 reused the same letters but included various marks to note the change Fractions were indicated as the denominator followed by a keraia ʹ gʹ indicated one third dʹ one fourth and so on As an exception special symbol ʹ indicated one half and g ʹ or goʹ was two thirds These fractions were additive also known as Egyptian fractions for example dʹ ϛʹ indicated 1 4 1 6 5 12 A 14th century Byzantine map of the British Isles from a manuscript of Ptolemy s Geography using Greek numerals for its graticule 52 63 N of the equator and 6 33 E from Ptolemy s Prime Meridian at the Fortunate Isles Although the Greek alphabet began with only majuscule forms surviving papyrus manuscripts from Egypt show that uncial and cursive minuscule forms began early clarification needed These new letter forms sometimes replaced the former ones especially in the case of the obscure numerals The old Q shaped koppa Ϙ began to be broken up and and simplified and The numeral for 6 changed several times During antiquity the original letter form of digamma Ϝ came to be avoided in favour of a special numerical one By the Byzantine era the letter was known as episemon and written as or This eventually merged with the sigma tau ligature stigma ϛ or In modern Greek a number of other changes have been made Instead of extending an over bar over an entire number the keraia keraia lit hornlike projection is marked to its upper right a development of the short marks formerly used for single numbers and fractions The modern keraia is a symbol similar to the acute accent the tonos U 0384 and the prime symbol U 02B9 ʹ but has its own Unicode character as U 0374 Alexander the Great s father Philip II of Macedon is thus known as Filippos Bʹ in modern Greek A lower left keraia Unicode U 0375 Greek Lower Numeral Sign is now standard for distinguishing thousands 2019 is represented as BI8ʹ 2 1 000 10 9 The declining use of ligatures in the 20th century also means that stigma is frequently written as the separate letters STʹ although a single keraia is used for the group 10 Isopsephy EditMain article Isopsephy The practice of adding up the number values of Greek letters of words names and phrases thus connecting the meaning of words names and phrases with others with equivalent numeric sums is called isopsephy A similar practice adapted for the Hebrew alphabet is referred to as gematria Table EditAncient Byzantine Modern Value Ancient Byzantine Modern Value Ancient Byzantine Modern Value a Aʹ 1 i Iʹ 10 r Rʹ 100 b Bʹ 2 k Kʹ 20 s Sʹ 200 g Gʹ 3 l Lʹ 30 t Tʹ 300 d Dʹ 4 m Mʹ 40 y Yʹ 400 e Eʹ 5 n Nʹ 50 f Fʹ 500 and and Ϛʹ ϜʹSTʹ 6 3 3ʹ 60 x Xʹ 600 z Zʹ 7 o Oʹ 70 ps PSʹ 700 h Hʹ 8 p Pʹ 80 w Wʹ 800 8 8ʹ 9 and and ϞʹϘʹ 90 and and and and and ϠʹͲʹ 900 and a A 1000 i I 10000 r R 100000 b B 2000 k K 20000 s S 200000 G 3000 l L 30000 t T 300000 D 4000 m M 40000 y Y 400000 e E 5000 n N 50000 f F 500000 and and Ϛ Ϝ ST 6000 3 3 60000 x X 600000 z Z 7000 o O 70000 ps PS 700000 h H 8000 p P 80000 w W 800000 8 8 9000 and and Ϟ Ϙ 90000 and and and and and Ϡ Ͳ 900000Alternatively sub sections of manuscripts are sometimes numbered by lowercase characters aʹ bʹ gʹ dʹ eʹ ϛʹ zʹ hʹ 8ʹ In Ancient Greek myriad notation is used for multiples of 10 000 for example b M for 20 000 or rkg M df3z also written on the line as rkg M df3z for 1 234 567 11 Higher numbers EditIn his text The Sand Reckoner the natural philosopher Archimedes gives an upper bound of the number of grains of sand required to fill the entire universe using a contemporary estimation of its size This would defy the then held notion that it is impossible to name a number greater than that of the sand on a beach or on the entire world In order to do that he had to devise a new numeral scheme with much greater range Pappus of Alexandria reports that Apollonius of Perga developed a simpler system based on powers of the myriad a M was 10 000 b M was 10 0002 100 000 000 g M was 10 0003 1012 and so on 11 Zero Edit Example of the early Greek symbol for zero lower right corner from a 2nd century papyrus Hellenistic astronomers extended alphabetic Greek numerals into a sexagesimal positional numbering system by limiting each position to a maximum value of 50 9 and including a special symbol for zero which was only used alone for a whole table cell rather than combined with other digits like today s modern zero which is a placeholder in positional numeric notation This system was probably adapted from Babylonian numerals by Hipparchus c 140 BC It was then used by Ptolemy c 140 Theon c 380 and Theon s daughter Hypatia died 415 The symbol for zero is clearly different from that of the value for 70 omicron or o In the 2nd century papyrus shown here one can see the symbol for zero in the lower right and a number of larger omicrons elsewhere in the same papyrus In Ptolemy s table of chords the first fairly extensive trigonometric table there were 360 rows portions of which looked as follows p e ϱ i f e ϱ e i w n e y ϑ e i w n e 3 h k o s t w n p d p e p e p ϛ p ϛ p z p m a g p a d i e p a k z k b p a n k d p b i g i ϑ p b l ϛ ϑ m ϛ k e m ϛ i d m ϛ g m e n b m e m m e k ϑ displaystyle begin array ccc pi varepsilon varrho iota varphi varepsilon varrho varepsilon iota tilde omega nu amp varepsilon overset text upsilon vartheta varepsilon iota tilde omega nu amp overset text varepsilon xi eta kappa mathrm o sigma tau tilde omega nu begin array l hline pi delta angle pi varepsilon pi varepsilon angle hline pi mathrm stigma pi mathrm stigma angle pi zeta hline end array amp begin array r r r hline pi amp mu alpha amp gamma pi alpha amp delta amp iota varepsilon pi alpha amp kappa zeta amp kappa beta hline pi alpha amp nu amp kappa delta pi beta amp iota gamma amp iota vartheta pi beta amp lambda mathrm stigma amp vartheta hline end array amp begin array r r r r hline circ amp circ amp mu mathrm stigma amp kappa varepsilon circ amp circ amp mu mathrm stigma amp iota delta circ amp circ amp mu mathrm stigma amp gamma hline circ amp circ amp mu varepsilon amp nu beta circ amp circ amp mu varepsilon amp mu circ amp circ amp mu varepsilon amp kappa vartheta hline end array end array Each number in the first column labeled perifereiῶn is the number of degrees of arc on a circle Each number in the second column labeled eὐ8eiῶn is the length of the corresponding chord of the circle when the diameter is 120 Thus pd represents an 84 arc and the after it means one half so that pd means 84 1 2 In the next column we see p ma g meaning 80 41 60 3 60 That is the length of the chord corresponding to an arc of 84 1 2 when the diameter of the circle is 120 The next column labeled ἐ3hkostῶn for sixtieths is the number to be added to the chord length for each 1 increase in the arc over the span of the next 12 Thus that last column was used for linear interpolation The Greek sexagesimal placeholder or zero symbol changed over time The symbol used on papyri during the second century was a very small circle with an overbar several diameters long terminated or not at both ends in various ways Later the overbar shortened to only one diameter similar to the modern o macron ō which was still being used in late medieval Arabic manuscripts whenever alphabetic numerals were used But the overbar was omitted in Byzantine manuscripts leaving a bare o omicron This gradual change from an invented symbol to o does not support the hypothesis that the latter was the initial of oὐden meaning nothing 12 13 Note that the letter o was still used with its original numerical value of 70 however there was no ambiguity as 70 could not appear in the fractional part of a sexagesimal number and zero was usually omitted when it was the integer Some of Ptolemy s true zeros appeared in the first line of each of his eclipse tables where they were a measure of the angular separation between the center of the Moon and either the center of the Sun for solar eclipses or the center of Earth s shadow for lunar eclipses All of these zeros took the form o o o where Ptolemy actually used three of the symbols described in the previous paragraph The vertical bar indicates that the integral part on the left was in a separate column labeled in the headings of his tables as digits of five arc minutes each whereas the fractional part was in the next column labeled minute of immersion meaning sixtieths and thirty six hundredths of a digit 14 Character information Preview Unicode name GREEK ZERO SIGNEncodings decimal hexUnicode 65930 U 1018AUTF 8 240 144 134 138 F0 90 86 8AUTF 16 55296 56714 D800 DD8ANumeric character reference amp 65930 wbr amp x1018A wbr See also EditAlphabetic numeral system Type of numeral system Attic numerals Symbolic number notation used by the ancient Greeks Cyrillic numerals Numeral system derived from the Cyrillic script Greek mathematics Mathematics of Ancient Greeks Greek numerals in Unicode acrophonic not alphabetic numerals Hebrew numerals Numeral system using letters of the Hebrew alphabet based on the Greek system History of ancient numeral systems Symbols representing numbers History of arithmetic Aspect of history History of communication Aspect of history Isopsephy Practice of adding up number values of letters in a word to form a single number List of numeral system topics List of numeral systems List of numeral systems Number of the beast Number associated with the Beast of Revelation Roman numerals Numbers in the Roman numeral systemReferences Edit a b Verdan Samuel 20 March 2007 Systemes numeraux en Grece ancienne Description et mise en perspective historique in French Archived from the original on 2 February 2010 Retrieved 2 March 2011 a b Heath Thomas L 2003 1931 A Manual of Greek Mathematics 2003 reprint ed Oxford UK Oxford University Press 1931 Dover Books 2003 pp 14 ff ISBN 9780486154442 Retrieved 1 November 2013 via Google Books Thompson Edward M 1893 Handbook of Greek and Latin Palaeography New York NY D Appleton p 114 IG I 1387 Searchable Greek Inscriptions The Packard Humanities Institute Cornell University amp Ohio State University IG I 1387 also known as IG I 760 Retrieved 1 November 2013 Jeffery Lilian H 1961 The Local Scripts of Archaic Greece Oxford UK Clarendon Press pp 38 ff Magnesia 4 Searchable Greek Inscriptions The Packard Humanities Institute Cornell University amp Ohio State University Magnesia 4 also known as Syll 695 b Retrieved 1 November 2013 IG II 2776 Searchable Greek Inscriptions The Packard Humanities Institute Cornell University amp Ohio State University Retrieved 1 November 2013 Edkins Jo 2006 Classical Greek Numbers Archived from the original on 10 May 2013 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Heath Thomas L A Manual of Greek Mathematics pp 14 ff Oxford Univ Press Oxford 1931 Reprinted Dover Mineola 2003 Accessed 1 November 2013 Nick Nicholas 9 April 2005 Numerals Stigma Koppa Sampi Archived from the original on 5 August 2012 Retrieved 2 March 2011 a b Greek number systems MacTutor Neugebauer Otto 1969 1957 The Exact Sciences in Antiquity 2 reprint ed Dover Publications pp 13 14 plate 2 ISBN 978 0 486 22332 2 Mercier Raymond Consideration of the Greek symbol zero PDF gives numerous examples Ptolemy Claudius 1998 100 170 CE Book VI Ptolemy s Almagest Translated by Toomer G J Princeton NJ Princeton University Press pp 306 307 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Greek numerals The Greek Number Converter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Greek numerals amp oldid 1127455507, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.