fbpx
Wikipedia

Roman numerals

Roman numerals are a numeral system that originated in ancient Rome and remained the usual way of writing numbers throughout Europe well into the Late Middle Ages. Numbers are written with combinations of letters from the Latin alphabet, each letter with a fixed integer value. Modern style uses only these seven:

Roman numerals on stern of the ship Cutty Sark showing draught in feet. The numbers range from 13 to 22, from bottom to top.
I V X L C D M
1 5 10 50 100 500 1000

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 by Arabic numerals; however, this process was gradual, and the use of Roman numerals persists in some applications to this day.

One place they are often seen is on clock faces. For instance, on the clock of Big Ben (designed in 1852), the hours from 1 to 12 are written as:

I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, IX, X, XI, XII

The notations IV and IX can be read as "one less than five" (4) and "one less than ten" (9), although there is a tradition favouring representation of "4" as "IIII" on Roman numeral clocks.[1]

Other common uses include year numbers on monuments and buildings and copyright dates on the title screens of movies and television programs. MCM, signifying "a thousand, and a hundred less than another thousand", means 1900, so 1912 is written MCMXII. For the years of the current (21st) century, MM indicates 2000. The current year is MMXXIII (2023).

Description

Roman numerals use different symbols for each power of ten and no zero symbol, in contrast with the place value notation of Arabic numerals (in which place-keeping zeros enable the same digit to represent different powers of ten).

This allows some flexibility in notation, and there has never been an official or universally accepted standard for Roman numerals. Usage varied greatly in ancient Rome and became thoroughly chaotic in medieval times. Even the post-renaissance restoration of a largely "classical" notation has failed to produce total consistency: variant forms are even defended by some modern writers as offering improved "flexibility".[2] On the other hand, especially where a Roman numeral is considered a legally binding expression of a number, as in U.S. Copyright law (where an "incorrect" or ambiguous numeral may invalidate a copyright claim, or affect the termination date of the copyright period)[3] it is desirable to strictly follow the usual style described below.

Standard form

The following table displays how Roman numerals are usually written:[4]

Individual decimal places
Thousands Hundreds Tens Units
1 M C X I
2 MM CC XX II
3 MMM CCC XXX III
4 CD XL IV
5 D L V
6 DC LX VI
7 DCC LXX VII
8 DCCC LXXX VIII
9 CM XC IX

The numerals for 4 (IV) and 9 (IX) are written using subtractive notation,[5] where the smaller symbol (I) is subtracted from the larger one (V, or X), thus avoiding the clumsier IIII and VIIII.[a] Subtractive notation is also used for 40 (XL), 90 (XC), 400 (CD) and 900 (CM).[6] These are the only subtractive forms in standard use.

A number containing two or more decimal digits is built by appending the Roman numeral equivalent for each, from highest to lowest, as in the following examples:

  •    39 = XXX + IX = XXXIX.
  •   246 = CC + XL + VI = CCXLVI.
  •   789 = DCC + LXXX + IX = DCCLXXXIX.
  • 2,421 = MM + CD + XX + I = MMCDXXI.

Any missing place (represented by a zero in the place-value equivalent) is omitted, as in Latin (and English) speech:

  •   160 = C + LX = CLX
  •   207 = CC + VII = CCVII
  • 1,009 = M + IX = MIX
  • 1,066 = M + LX + VI = MLXVI[7][8]

The largest number that can be represented in this manner is 3,999 (MMMCMXCIX), but this is sufficient for the values for which Roman numerals are commonly used today, such as year numbers:

  • 1776 = M + DCC + LXX + VI = MDCCLXXVI (the date written on the book held by the Statue of Liberty).
  • 1918 = M + CM + X + VIII = MCMXVIII (the first year of the Spanish flu pandemic)
  • 1944 = M + CM + XL + IV = MCMXLIV (erroneous copyright notice of the 1954 movie The Last Time I Saw Paris)[3]
  • 2023 = MMXXIII (this year)[b]

Prior to the introduction of Arabic numerals in the West, ancient and medieval users of Roman numerals used various means to write larger numbers; see large numbers below.

Other forms

Forms exist that vary in one way or another from the general standard represented above.

Other additive forms

 
A clock face with the Roman numerals typical for clocks, in Bad Salzdetfurth, Germany

While subtractive notation for 4, 40 and 400 (IV, XL and CD) has been the usual form since Roman times, additive notation to represent these numbers (IIII, XXXX and CCCC)[9] continued to be used, including in compound numbers like 24 (XXIIII),[10] 74 (LXXIIII),[11] and 490 (CCCCLXXXX).[12] The additive forms for 9, 90, and 900 (VIIII,[9] LXXXX,[13] and DCCCC[14]) have also been used, although less often.

The two conventions could be mixed in the same document or inscription, even in the same numeral. For example, on the numbered gates to the Colosseum, IIII is systematically used instead of IV, but subtractive notation is used for XL; consequently, gate 44 is labelled XLIIII.[15][16]

Modern clock faces that use Roman numerals still very often use IIII for four o'clock but 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.[17][18][19] However, this is far from universal: for example, the clock on the Palace of Westminster tower (commonly known as Big Ben) uses a subtractive IV for 4 o'clock.[18][c]

 
The year number on Admiralty Arch, London. The year 1910 is rendered as MDCCCCX, rather than the more usual MCMX

Several monumental inscriptions created in the early 20th century use variant forms for "1900" (usually written MCM). These vary from MDCCCCX for 1910 as seen on Admiralty Arch, London, to the more unusual, if not unique MDCDIII for 1903, on the north entrance to the Saint Louis Art Museum.[21]

Especially on tombstones and other funerary inscriptions 5 and 50 have been occasionally written IIIII and XXXXX instead of V and L, and there are instances such as IIIIII and XXXXXX rather than VI or LX.[22][23]

 
Epitaph of centurion Marcus Caelius, showing "XIIX"

Other subtractive forms

There are numerous historical examples of IIX being used for 8, for example XIIX was used by officers of the XVIII Roman Legion to write their number.[24][25] The notation appears prominently on the cenotaph of their senior centurion Marcus Caelius (c. 45 BC – 9 AD). On the publicly displayed official Roman calendars known as Fasti, XIIX is used for the 18 days to the next Kalends, and XXIIX for the 28 days in February. The latter can be seen on the sole extant pre-Julian calendar, the Fasti Antiates Maiores.[26] There are historical examples of other subtractive forms: IIIXX for 17,[27] IIXX for 18,[28] IIIC for 97,[29] IIC for 98,[30][31] and IC for 99.[32] A possible explanation is that the word for 18 in Latin is duodeviginti, literally "two from twenty", 98 is duodecentum (two from hundred), and 99 is undecentum (one from hundred).[33] However, the explanation does not seem to apply to IIIXX and IIIC, since the Latin words for 17 and 97 were septendecim (seven ten) and nonaginta septem (ninety seven), respectively.

The ROMAN() function in Microsoft Excel supports multiple subtraction modes depending on the "Form" setting. For example, the number "499" (usually CDXCIX) can be rendered as LDVLIV, XDIX, VDIV or ID. The relevant Microsoft help page offers no explanation for this function other than to describe its output as "more concise".[34]

Non-standard variants

 
Padlock used on the north gate of the Irish town of Athlone. "1613" in the date is rendered XVIXIII, (literally "16, 13") instead of MDCXIII.

There are also historical examples of other additive and multiplicative forms, and forms which seem to reflect spoken phrases. Some of these variants may have been regarded as errors even by contemporaries.

  • IIXX was how people associated with the XXII Roman Legion used to write their number. The practice may have been due to a common way to say "twenty-second" in Latin, namely duo et vice(n)sima (literally "two and twentieth") rather than the "regular" vice(n)sima secunda (twenty second).[35] Apparently, at least one ancient stonecutter mistakenly thought that the IIXX of "22nd Legion" stood for 18, and "corrected" it to XVIII.[35]
 
Excerpt from Bibliothèque nationale de France.[36] The Roman numeral for 500 is rendered as CV, instead of D.
  • There are some examples of year numbers after 1000 written as two Roman numerals 1–99, e.g. 1613 as XVIXIII, corresponding to the common reading "sixteen thirteen" of such year numbers in English, or 1519 as XCVXIX as in French quinze-cent-dix-neuf (fifteen-hundred and nineteen), and similar readings in other languages.[37]
  • In some French texts from the 15th century and later, one finds constructions like IIIIXXXIX for 99, reflecting the French reading of that number as quatre-vingt-dix-neuf (four-score and nineteen).[37] Similarly, in some English documents one finds, for example, 77 written as "iiixxxvii" (which could be read "three-score and seventeen").[38]
  • A medieval accounting text from 1301 renders numbers like 13,573 as "XIII. M. V. C. III. XX. XIII", that is, "13×1000 + 5×100 + 3×20 + 13".[39]
  • Other numerals that do not fit the usual patterns – such as VXL for 45, instead of the usual XLV — may be due to scribal errors, or the writer's lack of familiarity with the system, rather than being genuine variant usage.

Non-numeric combinations

As Roman numerals are composed of ordinary alphabetic characters, there may sometimes be confusion with other uses of the same letters. For example, "XXX" and "XL" have other connotations in addition to their values as Roman numerals, while "IXL" more often than not is a gramogram of "I excel", and is in any case not an unambiguous Roman numeral.[40]

Zero

As a non-positional numeral system, Roman numerals have no "place-keeping" zeros. Furthermore, the system as used by the Romans lacked a numeral for the number zero itself (that is, what remains after 1 is subtracted from 1). The word nulla (the Latin word meaning "none") was used to represent 0, although the earliest attested instances are medieval. For instance Dionysius Exiguus used nulla alongside Roman numerals in a manuscript from 525 AD.[41][42] About 725, Bede or one of his colleagues used the letter N, the initial of nulla or of nihil (the Latin word for "nothing") for 0, in a table of epacts, all written in Roman numerals.[43]

The use of N to indicate "none" long survived in the historic apothecaries' system of measurement: used well into the 20th century to designate quantities in pharmaceutical prescriptions.[44]

Fractions

 
A triens coin (13 or 412 of an as). Note the four dots (····) indicating its value.
 
A semis coin (12 or 612 of an as). Note the S indicating its value.

The base "Roman fraction" is S, indicating 12. The use of S (as in VIIS to indicate 712) is attested in some ancient inscriptions[45] and also in the now rare apothecaries' system (usually in the form SS):[44] but while Roman numerals for whole numbers are essentially decimal, S does not correspond to 510, as one might expect, but 612.

The Romans used a duodecimal rather than a decimal system for fractions, as the divisibility of twelve (12 = 22 × 3) makes it easier to handle the common fractions of 13 and 14 than does a system based on ten (10 = 2 × 5). Notation for fractions other than 12 is mainly found on surviving Roman coins, many of which had values that were duodecimal fractions of the unit as. Fractions less than 12 are indicated by a dot (·) for each uncia "twelfth", the source of the English words inch and ounce; dots are repeated for fractions up to five twelfths. Six twelfths (one half), is S for semis "half". Uncia dots were added to S for fractions from seven to eleven twelfths, just as tallies were added to V for whole numbers from six to nine.[46] 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.

Each fraction from 112 to 1212 had a name in Roman times; these corresponded to the names of the related coins:

Fraction Roman numeral Name (nominative and genitive singular) Meaning
112 · Uncia, unciae "Ounce"
212 = 16 ·· or : Sextans, sextantis "Sixth"
312 = 14 ··· or Quadrans, quadrantis "Quarter"
412 = 13 ···· or Triens, trientis "Third"
512 ····· or Quincunx, quincuncis "Five-ounce" (quinque unciaequincunx)
612 = 12 S Semis, semissis "Half"
712 S· Septunx, septuncis "Seven-ounce" (septem unciaeseptunx)
812 = 23 S·· or S: Bes, bessis "Twice" (as in "twice a third")
912 = 34 S··· or S Dodrans, dodrantis
or nonuncium, nonuncii
"Less a quarter" (de-quadransdodrans)
or "ninth ounce" (nona uncianonuncium)
1012 = 56 S···· or S Dextans, dextantis
or decunx, decuncis
"Less a sixth" (de-sextansdextans)
or "ten ounces" (decem unciaedecunx)
1112 S····· or S Deunx, deuncis "Less an ounce" (de-unciadeunx)
1212 = 1 I As, assis "Unit"

Other Roman fractional notations included the following:

Fraction Roman numeral Name (nominative and genitive singular) Meaning
11728=12−3 𐆕 Siliqua, siliquae
1288 Scripulum, scripuli "scruple"
1144=12−2 Ƨ Dimidia sextula, dimidiae sextulae "half a sextula"
172 Ƨ Sextula, sextulae "16 of an uncia"
148 Sicilicus, sicilici
136 ƧƧ Binae sextulae, binarum sextularum
(Exceptionally, these are plural forms.)
"two sextulas" (duella, duellae)
124 Σ or 𐆒 or Є Semuncia, semunciae "12 uncia" (semi- + uncia)
18 Σ· or 𐆒· or Є· Sescuncia, sescunciae "1+12 uncias" (sesqui- + uncia)

Large numbers

The Romans developed two main ways of writing large numbers, the apostrophus and the vinculum, further extended in various ways in later times.

Apostrophus

 
"1630" on the Westerkerk in Amsterdam. "M" and "D" are given archaic apostrophus form.

Using the apostrophus method,[47] 500 is written as IↃ, while 1,000 is written as CIↃ.[20] This system of encasing numbers to denote thousands (imagine the Cs and s as parentheses) had its origins in Etruscan numeral usage.

Each additional set of C and surrounding CIↃ raises the value by a factor of ten: CCIↃↃ represents 10,000 and CCCIↃↃↃ represents 100,000. Similarly, each additional to the right of IↃ raises the value by a factor of ten: IↃↃ represents 5,000 and IↃↃↃ represents 50,000. Numerals larger than CCCIↃↃↃ do not occur.[48]

 
Page from a 16th-century manual, showing a mixture of apostrophus and vinculum numbers (see in particular the ways of writing 10,000).
  • IↃ = 500               CIↃ = 1,000
  • IↃↃ = 5,000         CCIↃↃ = 10,000
  • IↃↃↃ = 50,000    CCCIↃↃↃ = 100,000

Sometimes CIↃ (1000) is reduced to , IↃↃ (5,000) to ; CCIↃↃ (10,000) to ; IↃↃↃ (50,000) to ; and CCCIↃↃↃ (100,000) to .[49] It is likely IↃ (500) reduced to D and CIↃ (1000) influenced the later M.

John Wallis is often credited with introducing the symbol for infinity ⟨∞⟩, and one conjecture is that he based it on , since 1,000 was hyperbolically used to represent very large numbers.

Vinculum

Using the vinculum, conventional Roman numerals are multiplied by 1,000 by adding a "bar" or "overline", thus:[49]

  • IV = 4,000
  • XXV = 25,000

The vinculum came into use in the late Republic,[50] and it was a common alternative to the apostrophic ↀ during the Imperial era around the Roman world (M for '1000' was not in use until the Medieval period).[51][52] It continued in use in the Middle Ages, though it became known more commonly as titulus,[53] and it appears in modern editions of classical and medieval Latin texts.[54][55]

In an extension of the vinculum, a three-sided box (now sometimes printed as two vertical lines and a vinculum) is used to multiply by 100,000,[56][50] thus:

Vinculum notation is distinct from the custom of adding an overline to a numeral simply to indicate that it is a number. Both usages can be seen on Roman inscriptions of the same period and general location, such as on the Antonine Wall.[57][58]

Origin

The system is closely associated with the ancient city-state of Rome and the Empire that it created. However, due to the scarcity of surviving examples, the origins of the system are obscure and there are several competing theories, all largely conjectural.

Etruscan numerals

Rome was founded sometime between 850 and 750 BC. At the time, the region was inhabited by diverse populations of which the Etruscans were the most advanced. The ancient Romans themselves admitted that the basis of much of their civilization was Etruscan. Rome itself was located next to the southern edge of the Etruscan domain, which covered a large part of north-central Italy.

The Roman numerals, in particular, are directly derived from the Etruscan number symbols: ⟨𐌠⟩, ⟨𐌡⟩, ⟨𐌢⟩, ⟨𐌣⟩, and ⟨𐌟⟩ for 1, 5, 10, 50, and 100 (they had more symbols for larger numbers, but it is unknown which symbol represents which number). As in the basic Roman system, the Etruscans wrote the symbols that added to the desired number, from higher to lower value. Thus, the number 87, for example, would be written 50 + 10 + 10 + 10 + 5 + 1 + 1 = 𐌣𐌢𐌢𐌢𐌡𐌠𐌠 (this would appear as 𐌠𐌠𐌡𐌢𐌢𐌢𐌣 since Etruscan was written from right to left.)[59]

The symbols ⟨𐌠⟩ and ⟨𐌡⟩ resembled letters of the Etruscan alphabet, but ⟨𐌢⟩, ⟨𐌣⟩, and ⟨𐌟⟩ did not. The Etruscans used the subtractive notation, too, but not like the Romans. They wrote 17, 18, and 19 as 𐌠𐌠𐌠𐌢𐌢, 𐌠𐌠𐌢𐌢, and 𐌠𐌢𐌢, mirroring the way they spoke those numbers ("three from twenty", etc.); and similarly for 27, 28, 29, 37, 38, etc. However, they did not write 𐌠𐌡 for 4 (nor 𐌢𐌣 for 40), and wrote 𐌡𐌠𐌠, 𐌡𐌠𐌠𐌠 and 𐌡𐌠𐌠𐌠𐌠 for 7, 8, and 9, respectively.[59]

Early Roman numerals

The early Roman numerals for 1, 10, and 100 were the Etruscan ones: ⟨𐌠⟩, ⟨𐌢⟩, and ⟨𐌟⟩. The symbols for 5 and 50 changed from ⟨𐌡⟩ and ⟨𐌣⟩ to ⟨V⟩ and ⟨ↆ⟩ at some point. The latter had flattened to ⟨⊥⟩ (an inverted T) by the time of Augustus, and soon afterwards became identified with the graphically similar letter L.[48]

The symbol for 100 was written variously as ⟨𐌟⟩ or ⟨ↃIC⟩, and was then abbreviated to or C, with C (which matched the Latin letter C) finally winning out. It might have helped that C was the initial letter of CENTUM, Latin for "hundred".

The numbers 500 and 1000 were denoted by V or X overlaid with a box or circle. Thus, 500 was like a Ɔ superimposed on a or , making it look like Þ. It became D or 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 a CIↃ, and half of a thousand or "five hundred" is the right half of the symbol, IↃ, and this may have been converted into D.[20]

The notation for 1000 was a circled or boxed X: Ⓧ, , , and by Augustinian times was partially identified with the Greek letter Φ phi. Over time, the symbol changed to Ψ and . The latter symbol further evolved into , then , and eventually changed to M under the influence of the Latin word mille "thousand".[48]

According to Paul Kayser, the basic numerical symbols were I, X, 𐌟 and Φ (or ) and the intermediate ones were derived by taking half of those (half an X is V, half a 𐌟 is and half a Φ/⊕ is D). Then 𐌟 and ↆ developed as mentioned above.[60]

 
Entrance to section LII (52) of the Colosseum, with numerals still visible

Classical Roman numerals

The Colosseum was constructed in Rome in CE 72–80,[61] and while the original perimeter wall has largely disappeared, the numbered entrances from XXIII (23) to LIIII (54) survive,[62] to demonstrate that in Imperial times Roman numerals had already assumed their classical form: as largely standardised in current use. The most obvious anomaly (a common one that persisted for centuries) is the inconsistent use of subtractive notation - while XL is used for 40, IV is avoided in favour of IIII: in fact, gate 44 is labelled XLIIII.

Use in the Middle Ages and Renaissance

Lower case, or minuscule, 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: i, ii, iii, iv, and so on.

 
13th century example of iiij.

Since the Middle Ages, a "j" has sometimes been substituted for the final "i" of a "lower-case" Roman numeral, such as "iij" for 3 or "vij" for 7. This "j" can be considered a swash variant of "i". Into the early 20th century, the use of a final "j" was still sometimes used in medical prescriptions to prevent tampering with or misinterpretation of a number after it was written.[63]

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 "A" for "V", or "Q" for "D"), while others serve as abbreviations for compound numerals ("O" for "XI", or "F" for "XL"). Although they are still listed today in some dictionaries, they are long out of use.[64]

A superscript "o" (sometimes written directly above the symbol) was sometimes used as an ordinal indicator.[65]

Number Medieval
abbreviation
Notes and etymology
5 A Resembles an upside-down V. Also said to equal 500.
6 Either from a ligature of VI, or from digamma (ϛ), the Greek numeral 6 (sometimes conflated with the στ ligature).[48]
7 S, Z Presumed abbreviation of septem, Latin for 7.
9.5 Scribal abbreviation, an x with a slash through it. Likewise, IX̷ represented 8.5
11 O Presumed abbreviation of onze, French for 11.
40 F Presumed abbreviation of English forty.
70 S Also could stand for 7, with the same derivation.
80 R
90 N Presumed abbreviation of nonaginta, Latin for 90. (Ambiguous with N for "nothing" (nihil)).
150 Y Possibly derived from the lowercase y's shape.
151 K Unusual, origin unknown; also said to stand for 250.[66]
160 T Possibly derived from Greek tetra, as 4 × 40 = 160.
200 H Could also stand for 2 (see also 𐆙, the symbol for the dupondius). From a barring of two I's.
250 E
300 B
400 P, G
500 Q Redundant with D; abbreviates quingenti, Latin for 500. Also sometimes used for 500,000.[67]
800 Ω Borrowed from Gothic.
900 ϡ Borrowed from Gothic.
2000 Z

Chronograms, messages with dates encoded into them, were popular during the Renaissance era. The chronogram would be a phrase containing the letters I, V, X, L, C, D, and M. By putting these letters together, the reader would obtain a number, usually indicating a particular year.

Modern use

By the 11th century, 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.
 
The year of construction of the Cambridge Public Library, (USA) 1888, displayed in "standard" Roman numerals on its facade.

Specific disciplines

In astronautics, United States rocket model variants are sometimes designated by Roman numerals, e.g. Titan I, Titan II, Titan III, Saturn I, Saturn V.

In astronomy, the natural satellites or "moons" of the planets are designated by capital Roman numerals appended to the planet's name. For example, Titan's designation is Saturn VI.[69]

In chemistry, Roman numerals are sometimes used to denote the groups of the periodic table, but this has officially been deprecated in favour of Arabic numerals.[70] 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 education, school grades (in the sense of year-groups rather than test scores) are sometimes referred to by a Roman numeral; for example, "grade IX" is sometimes seen for "grade 9".

In entomology, the broods of the thirteen- and seventeen-year periodical cicadas are identified by Roman numerals.

In graphic design stylised Roman numerals may represent numeric values.

In law, Roman numerals are commonly used to help organize legal codes as part of an alphanumeric outline.

 
Stylised "IX" represents "9" in unit emblem of 9th Aero Squadron AEF, 1918.

In mathematics (including trigonometry, statistics, and calculus), when a graph includes negative numbers, its quadrants are named using I, II, III, and 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 Arabic numerals are used for the actual data represented in the graph.

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 Arabic numerals being used for divisions and armies.

In music, Roman numerals are used in several contexts:

In pharmacy, Roman numerals were used with the now largely obsolete apothecaries' system of measurement: including SS to denote "one half" and N to denote "zero".[44][71]

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 sport the team containing the "top" players and representing a nation or province, a club or a school at the highest level in (say) rugby union is often called the "1st XV", while a lower-ranking cricket or American football team might be the "3rd XI".

In tarot, Roman numerals (with zero) are often used to denote the cards of the Major Arcana.

In theology and biblical scholarship, the Septuagint is often referred to as LXX, as this translation of the Old Testament into Greek is named for the legendary number of its translators (septuaginta being Latin for "seventy").

Modern use in European languages other than English

Some uses that are rare or never seen in English speaking countries may be relatively common in parts of continental Europe and in other regions (e.g. Latin America) that use a European language other than English. For instance:

Capital or small capital Roman numerals are widely used in Romance languages to denote centuries, e.g. the French XVIIIe siècle[72] and the Spanish siglo XVIII (not XVIII siglo) for "18th century". Slavic and Turkic languages in and adjacent to Russia similarly favor Roman numerals (e.g. Russian xviii век, Azeri xviii əsr). On the other hand, in Turkish and Slavic languages in Central Europe, like most Germanic languages, one writes "18." (with a period) before the local word for "century" (e.g. Turkish 18. yüzyıl, Czech 18. století).

 
Boris Yeltsin's signature, dated 10 November 1988, rendered as 10.XI.'88.

Mixed Roman and 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 Arabic numerals: "4.VI.1789" and "VI.4.1789" both refer unambiguously to 4 June 1789.

 
Business hours table on a shop window in Vilnius, Lithuania.

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,[73] and also sometimes in railway and bus timetables. Monday, taken as the first day of the week, is represented by I. Sunday is represented by 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, Italy.

Roman numerals may also be used for floor numbering.[74][75] For instance, apartments in central Amsterdam are indicated as 138-III, with both an 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 I to IX for the smaller intervals. The sign IX/17 thus marks 17.9 km.

Certain romance-speaking countries use Roman numerals to designate assemblies of their national legislatures. For instance, the composition of the Italian Parliament from 2018 to 2022 (elected in the 2018 Italian general election) is called the XVIII Legislature of the Italian Republic (or more commonly the "XVIII Legislature").

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.

Unicode

The "Number Forms" block of the Unicode computer character set standard has a number of Roman numeral symbols in the range of code points from U+2160 to U+2188.[76] This range includes both upper- and lowercase numerals, as well as pre-combined characters for numbers up to 12 (Ⅻ or XII). One justification for the existence of pre-combined numbers is to facilitate the setting of multiple-letter numbers (such as VIII) on a single horizontal line in Asian vertical text. The Unicode standard, however, includes special Roman numeral code points for compatibility only, stating that "[f]or most purposes, it is preferable to compose the Roman numerals from sequences of the appropriate Latin letters".[77] The block also includes some apostrophus symbols for large numbers, an old variant of "L" (50) similar to the Etruscan character, the Claudian letter "reversed C", etc.[78]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Without theorising about causation, it may be noted that IV and IX not only have fewer characters than IIII and VIIII, but are less likely to be confused (especially at a quick glance) with III and VIII.
  2. ^ This is the Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) year in which Wikipedia's cache of this page was last updated, so may be a few hours out of date.
  3. ^ Isaac Asimov once mentioned an "interesting theory" that Romans avoided using IV because it was the initial letters of IVPITER, the Latin spelling of Jupiter, and might have seemed impious.[20] He did not say whose theory it was.
  4. ^ XIII = 13 x 100,000 = 1,300,000 and XXXII = 32 x 1000 = 32,000, so 'XIII XXXII = 1,332,000. p. is a common abbreviation for passus, paces, the Romans counting a pace as two steps.

Citations

  1. ^ Judkins, Maura (4 November 2011). . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 15 November 2020. Retrieved 13 August 2019. Most clocks using Roman numerals traditionally use IIII instead of IV... One of the rare prominent clocks that uses the IV instead of IIII is Big Ben in London.
  2. ^ Adams, Cecil (23 February 1990). "What is the proper way to style Roman numerals for the 1990s?". The Straight Dope.
  3. ^ a b Hayes, David P. "Guide to Roman Numerals". Copyright Registration and Renewal Information Chart and Web Site.
  4. ^ Reddy, Indra K.; Khan, Mansoor A. (2003). "1 (Working with Arabic and Roman numerals)". Essential Math and Calculations for Pharmacy Technicians. CRC Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-203-49534-6. Table 1-1 Roman and Arabic numerals (table very similar to the table here, apart from inclusion of Vinculum notation.
  5. ^ Dehaene, Stanislas (1997). The Number Sense : How the Mind Creates Mathematics. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199723096. 288 pages.
  6. ^ Hazewinkel, Michiel, ed. (1990). "Numbers, Representations of". Encyclopaedia of Mathematics. Vol. 6. Springer. p. 502. ISBN 9781556080050. 546 pages.
  7. ^ Dela Cruz, M. L. P.; Torres, H. D. (2009). Number Smart Quest for Mastery: Teacher's Edition. Rex Bookstore, Inc. ISBN 9789712352164.
  8. ^ Martelli, Alex; Ascher, David (2002). Python Cookbook. O'Reilly Media Inc. ISBN 978-0-596-00167-4.
  9. ^ a b Gaius Iulius Caesar. Commentarii de bello Gallico, Book II, Section 4  (in Latin) – via Wikisource.
    Book II, Section 4: "... XV milia Atrebates, Ambianos X milia, Morinos XXV milia, Menapios VII milia, Caletos X milia, Veliocasses et Viromanduos totidem, Atuatucos XVIIII milia; ..."
    Book II, Section 8: "... ab utroque latere eius collis transversam fossam obduxit circiter passuum CCCC et ad extremas fossas castella constituit..."
    Book IV, Section 15: "Nostri ad unum omnes incolumes, perpaucis vulneratis, ex tanti belli timore, cum hostium numerus capitum CCCCXXX milium fuisset, se in castra receperunt."
    Book VII, Section 4: "...in hiberna remissis ipse se recipit die XXXX Bibracte."
  10. ^ Rocca, Angelo (1612). De campanis commentarius. Rome: Guillelmo Faciotti. Title of a Plate: "Campana a XXIIII hominibus pulsata" ("Bell to be sounded by 24 men").
  11. ^ Gerard Ter Borch (1673): Portrait of Cornelis de Graef. Date on painting: "Out. XXIIII Jaer. // M. DC. LXXIIII".
  12. ^ Gaius Plinius Secundus. Naturalis Historia, Book III  (in Latin) – via Wikisource. Book III: "Saturni vocatur, Caesaream Mauretaniae urbem CCLXXXXVII p[assum]. traiectus. reliqua in ora flumen Tader ... ortus in Cantabris haut procul oppido Iuliobrica, per CCCCL p. fluens ..."
    Book IV: "Epiri, Achaiae, Atticae, Thessalia in porrectum longitudo CCCCLXXXX traditur, latitudo CCLXXXXVII."
    Book VI: "tam vicinum Arsaniae fluere eum in regione Arrhene Claudius Caesar auctor est, ut, cum intumuere, confluant nec tamen misceantur leviorque Arsanias innatet MMMM ferme spatio, mox divisus in Euphraten mergatur."
  13. ^ Bennet, Thomas (1731). Grammatica Hebræa, cum uberrima praxi in usum tironum ... Editio tertia. T. Astley. p. 24. Copy in the British Library; 149 pages.
    Page 24: "PRÆFIXA duo sunt viz. He emphaticum vel relativum (de quo Cap VI Reg. LXXXX.) & Shin cum Segal sequente Dagesh, quod denotat pronomen relativum..."
  14. ^ Della Mirandola, Pico (1486). Conclusiones sive Theses DCCCC [Conclusions, or 900 Theses] (in Latin).
  15. ^ "360:12 tables, 24 chairs, and plenty of chalk". Roman Numerals...not quite so simple. 2 January 2011.
  16. ^ "Paul Lewis". Roman Numerals...How they work. 13 November 2021.
  17. ^ Milham, W.I. (1947). Time & Timekeepers. New York: Macmillan. p. 196.
  18. ^ a b Pickover, Clifford A. (2003). Wonders of Numbers: Adventures in Mathematics, Mind, and Meaning. Oxford University Press. p. 282. ISBN 978-0-19-534800-2.
  19. ^ Adams, Cecil; Zotti, Ed (1988). More of the straight dope. Ballantine Books. p. 154. ISBN 978-0-345-35145-6.
  20. ^ a b c Asimov, Isaac (1966). Asimov on Numbers (PDF). Pocket Books, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc. p. 12.
  21. ^ . Saint Louis Art Museum. Archived from the original on 4 December 2010. Retrieved 10 January 2014. The inscription over the North Entrance to the Museum reads: "Dedicated to Art and Free to All MDCDIII." These roman numerals translate to 1903, indicating that the engraving was part of the original building designed for the 1904 World's Fair.
  22. ^ Reynolds, Joyce Maire; Spawforth, Anthony J. S. (1996). "numbers, Roman". In Hornblower, Simon; Spawforth, Anthony (eds.). Oxford Classical Dictionary (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-866172-X.
  23. ^ Kennedy, Benjamin Hall (1923). The Revised Latin Primer. London: Longmans, Green & Co.
  24. ^ Adkins, Lesley; Adkins, Roy A (2004). Handbook to life in ancient Rome (2 ed.). Facts On File. p. 270. ISBN 0-8160-5026-0.
  25. ^ Boyne, William (1968). A manual of Roman coins. p. 13.
  26. ^ Degrassi, Atilius, ed. (1963). Inscriptiones Italiae. Vol. 13: Fasti et Elogia. Rome: Istituto Poligrafico dello Stato. Fasciculus 2: Fasti anni Numani et Iuliani.
  27. ^ Lundorphio, Michaele Gaspar (1621). Acta publica inter invictissimos gloriosissimosque&c. ... et Ferdinandum II. Romanorum Imperatores... (in Latin). Ian-Friderici Weissii. p. 123.
    Page 123: "Sub Dato Pragæ IIIXX Decemb. A. C. M. DC. IIXX".
    Page 126, end of the same document: "Dabantur Pragæ 17 Decemb. M. DC. IIXX".
  28. ^ Sulpicius à Munscrod, Raphael (1621). Vera Ac Germana Detecto Clandestinarvm Deliberationvm (in Latin). p. 16.
    Page 16, line 1: "repertum Originale Subdatum IIIXXX Aug. A. C. MDC.IIXX".
    Page 41, upper right corner: "Decemb. A. C. MDC.IIXX". Page 42, upper left corner: "Febr. A. C. MDC.XIX". Page 70: "IIXX. die Maij sequentia in consilio noua ex Bohemia allata....".
    Page 71: "XIX. Maij.
  29. ^ Tentzel, Wilhelm Ernst (1699). Als Ihre Königl. Majestät in Pohlen und ... (in German). p. 39.
    Page 39: "... und der Umschrifft: LITHUANIA ASSERTA M. DC. IIIC [1699]."
  30. ^ Posner, Johann Caspar (1698). Mvndvs ante mvndvm sive De Chao Orbis Primordio (in Latin).
    Title page: "Ad diem jvlii A. O. R. M DC IIC".
  31. ^ Tentzel, Wilhelm Ernst (1700). Saxonia Nvmismatica: Das ist: Die Historie Des Durchlauchtigsten... (in German). p. 26.
    Page 26: "Die Revers hat eine feine Inscription: SERENISSIMO DN.DN... SENATUS.QVERNF. A. M DC IIC D. 18 OCT [year 1698 day 18 oct]."
  32. ^ Piccolomini, Enea Silvio (1698). Opera Geographica et Historica (in Latin) (1st ed.). Helmstadt: J. M. Sustermann. Title page of first edition: "Bibliopolæ ibid. M DC IC".
  33. ^ Kennedy, Benjamin H. (1879). Latin grammar. London: Longmans, Green, and Co. p. 150. ISBN 9781177808293.
  34. ^ "ROMAN function". support.microsoft.com.
  35. ^ a b Malone, Stephen James (2005). Legio XX Valeria Victrix: A Prosographical and Historical Study (PDF) (Thesis). Vol. 2. University of Nottingham.
    On page 396 it discusses many coins with "Leg. IIXX" and notes that it must be Legion 22.
    The footnote on that page says: "The form IIXX clearly reflecting the Latin duo et vicensima 'twenty-second': cf. X5398, legatus I[eg II] I et vicensim(ae) Pri[mi]g; VI 1551, legatus leg] IIXX Prj; III 14207.7, miles leg IIXX; and III 10471-3, a vexillation drawn from four German legions including 'XVIII PR' – surely here the stonecutter's hypercorrection for IIXX PR.
  36. ^ L' Atre périlleux et Yvain, le chevalier au lion . 1301–1350.
  37. ^ a b Gachard, M. (1862). "II. Analectes historiques, neuvième série (nos CCLXI-CCLXXXIV)". Bulletin de la Commission royale d'Historie. 31 (3): 345–554. doi:10.3406/bcrh.1862.3033.
    Page 347: Lettre de Philippe le Beau aux échevins..., quote: "Escript en nostre ville de Gand, le XXIIIIme de febvrier, l'an IIIIXXXIX [quatre-vingt-dix-neuf = 99]."
    Page 356: Lettre de l'achiduchesse Marguerite au conseil de Brabant..., quote: "... Escript à Bruxelles, le dernier jour de juing anno XVcXIX [1519]."
    Page 374: Letters patentes de la rémission ... de la ville de Bruxelles, quote: "... Op heden, tweentwintich ['twenty-two'] daegen in decembri, anno vyfthien hondert tweendertich ['fifteen hundred thirty-two'] ... Gegeven op ten vyfsten dach in deser jegewoirdige maent van decembri anno XV tweendertich [1532] vorschreven."
    Page 419: Acte du duc de Parme portant approbation..., quote: "Faiet le XVme de juillet XVc huytante-six [1586].".
  38. ^ Salter, Herbert Edward (1923). Registrum Annalium Collegii Mertonensis 1483–1521. Vol. 76. Oxford Historical Society. 544 pages. Page 184 has the computation in pounds:shillings:pence (li:s:d) x:iii:iiii + xxi:viii:viii + xlv:xiiii:i = iiixxxvii:vi:i, i.e. 10:3:4 + 21:8:8 + 45:14:1 = 77:6:1.
  39. ^ de Sancto Justo, Johannis (1865) [1301]. de Wailly, Delisle (ed.). E Duo Codicibus Ceratis [From Two Texts in Wax] (in Latin). {{cite encyclopedia}}: |work= ignored (help) Volume 22 of Recueil des historiens des Gaules et de la France. Page 530: "SUMMA totalis, XIII. M. V. C. III. XX. XIII. l. III s. XI d. [Sum total, 13 thousand 5 hundred 3 score 13 livres, 3 sous, 11 deniers].
  40. ^ "Our Brand Story". SPC Ardmona. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
  41. ^ Bede: The Reckoning of Time. Translated by Wallis, Faith. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. 2004 [725]. ISBN 0-85323-693-3.
  42. ^ Baker, Peter S.; Lapidge, Michael, eds. (1995) [1016]. Byrhtferth's Enchiridion. Early English Text Society. ISBN 978-0-19-722416-8.
  43. ^ Jones, C. W. (ed.). Opera Didascalica. Corpus Christianorum, Series Latina. Vol. 123C.
  44. ^ a b c Bachenheimer, Bonnie S. (2010). Manual for Pharmacy Technicians. ISBN 978-1-58528-307-1.
  45. ^ "RIB 2208. Distance Slab of the Sixth Legion". Roman Inscriptions in Britain. Retrieved 11 November 2020.
  46. ^ Maher, David W.; Makowski, John F. (2011). (PDF). Classical Philology. 96 (4): 376–399. doi:10.1086/449557. S2CID 15162149. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 August 2013.
  47. ^ "Definition of Apostrophus". www.merriam-webster.com.
  48. ^ a b c d Perry, David J. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 June 2011..
  49. ^ a b 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.
  50. ^ a b Dilke, Oswald Ashton Wentworth (1987). Mathematics and measurement. Reading the past. London: British Museum Publications. p. 15. ISBN 978-0-7141-8067-0.
  51. ^ Chrisomalis, Stephen (2010). Numerical Notation: A Comparative History. Cambridge University Press. pp. 102–109. ISBN 978-0-521-87818-0.
  52. ^ Gordon, Arthur E. (1982). Illustrated Introduction to Latin Epigraphy. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 122–123. ISBN 0-520-05079-7.
  53. ^ Chrisomalis, Stephen (2010). Numerical Notation: A Comparative History. Cambridge University Press. p. 119. ISBN 978-0-521-87818-0.
  54. ^ Boethius (1867) [6th century AD]. De Institutione Arithmetica, libri duo (PDF). B.G.Teubner. p. 42. Retrieved 18 January 2023.
  55. ^ a b Pliny (1961) [1st century AD]. Natural History. Loeb Classical Library. Vol. L352. Harvard University Press. Book VI, XXVI, 100 (pp 414-415).
  56. ^ Chrisomalis, Stephen (2010). Numerical Notation: A Comparative History. Cambridge University Press. pp. 402–403. ISBN 978-0-521-87818-0.
  57. ^ "RIB 2208. Distance Slab of the Twentieth Legion". Roman Inscriptions in Britain. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
  58. ^ "RIB 2171. Building Inscription of the Second and Twentieth Legions". Roman Inscriptions in Britain. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
  59. ^ a b Van Heems, Gilles (2009). "Nombre, chiffre, lettre: Formes et réformes. Des notations chiffrées de l'étrusque" [Between Numbers and Letters: About Etruscan Notations of Numeral Sequences]. Revue de philologie, de littérature et d'histoire anciennes (in French). 83 (1): 103–130. ISSN 0035-1652.
  60. ^ Keyser, Paul (1988). "The Origin of the Latin Numerals 1 to 1000". American Journal of Archaeology. 92 (4): 529–546. doi:10.2307/505248. JSTOR 505248. S2CID 193086234.
  61. ^ Hopkins, Keith (2005). The Colosseum. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-01895-2.
  62. ^ Claridge, Amanda (1998). Rome: An Oxford Archaeological Guide (First ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-288003-1.
  63. ^ Bastedo, Walter A. Materia Medica: Pharmacology, Therapeutics and Prescription Writing for Students and Practitioners, 2nd ed. (Philadelphia, PA: W.B. Saunders, 1919) p582. Retrieved 15 March 2010.
  64. ^ Capelli, A. (1912). Dictionary of Latin Abbreviations.
  65. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 25 January 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  66. ^ Bang, Jørgen (1962). Fremmedordbog (in Danish). Berlingske Ordbøger.
  67. ^ Gordon, Arthur E. (1983). Illustrated Introduction to Latin Epigraphy. University of California Press. p. 44. ISBN 9780520038981. Retrieved 3 October 2015.
  68. ^ . National Football League. Archived from the original on 1 December 2015. Retrieved 5 November 2014.
  69. ^ "Planetary Satellite Discovery Circumstances". JPL Solar System Dynamics. NASA. 15 November 2021. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  70. ^ Fluck, E. (1988). "New Notations in the Periodic Table" (PDF). Pure Appl. Chem. IUPAC. 60 (3): 431–436. doi:10.1351/pac198860030431. S2CID 96704008. Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  71. ^ Reddy, Indra K.; Khan, Mansoor A. (2003). Essential Math and Calculations for Pharmacy Technicians. CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-203-49534-6.
  72. ^ Lexique des règles typographiques en usage à l'imprimerie nationale (in French) (6th ed.). Paris: Imprimerie nationale. March 2011. p. 126. ISBN 978-2-7433-0482-9. On composera en chiffres romains petites capitales les nombres concernant : ↲ 1. Les siècles.
  73. ^ . nationalarchives.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
  74. ^ . Southwestern Adventist University. Archived from the original on 22 November 2013. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
  75. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
  76. ^ "Unicode Number Forms" (PDF).
  77. ^ "The Unicode Standard, Version 6.0 – Electronic edition" (PDF). Unicode, Inc. 2011. p. 486.
  78. ^ "Roman symbol". symbolonly.com.

Sources

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

  • "Roman Numerals (Totally Epic Guide)". Know The Romans.

roman, numerals, latin, names, numbers, latin, numerals, this, article, contains, special, characters, without, proper, rendering, support, question, marks, boxes, other, symbols, numeral, system, that, originated, ancient, rome, remained, usual, writing, numb. For the Latin names of numbers see Latin numerals This article contains special characters Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols Roman numerals are a numeral system that originated in ancient Rome and remained the usual way of writing numbers throughout Europe well into the Late Middle Ages Numbers are written with combinations of letters from the Latin alphabet each letter with a fixed integer value Modern style uses only these seven Roman numerals on stern of the ship Cutty Sark showing draught in feet The numbers range from 13 to 22 from bottom to top I V X L C D M1 5 10 50 100 500 1000The use of Roman numerals continued long after the decline of the Roman Empire From the 14th century on Roman numerals began to be replaced by Arabic numerals however this process was gradual and the use of Roman numerals persists in some applications to this day One place they are often seen is on clock faces For instance on the clock of Big Ben designed in 1852 the hours from 1 to 12 are written as I II III IV V VI VII VIII IX X XI XII The notations IV and IX can be read as one less than five 4 and one less than ten 9 although there is a tradition favouring representation of 4 as IIII on Roman numeral clocks 1 Other common uses include year numbers on monuments and buildings and copyright dates on the title screens of movies and television programs MCM signifying a thousand and a hundred less than another thousand means 1900 so 1912 is written MCMXII For the years of the current 21st century MM indicates 2000 The current year is MMXXIII 2023 Contents 1 Description 1 1 Standard form 1 2 Other forms 1 2 1 Other additive forms 1 2 2 Other subtractive forms 1 2 3 Non standard variants 1 2 4 Non numeric combinations 1 3 Zero 1 4 Fractions 1 5 Large numbers 1 5 1 Apostrophus 1 5 2 Vinculum 2 Origin 2 1 Etruscan numerals 2 2 Early Roman numerals 2 3 Classical Roman numerals 3 Use in the Middle Ages and Renaissance 4 Modern use 4 1 Specific disciplines 4 2 Modern use in European languages other than English 5 Unicode 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Citations 8 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksDescriptionRoman numerals use different symbols for each power of ten and no zero symbol in contrast with the place value notation of Arabic numerals in which place keeping zeros enable the same digit to represent different powers of ten This allows some flexibility in notation and there has never been an official or universally accepted standard for Roman numerals Usage varied greatly in ancient Rome and became thoroughly chaotic in medieval times Even the post renaissance restoration of a largely classical notation has failed to produce total consistency variant forms are even defended by some modern writers as offering improved flexibility 2 On the other hand especially where a Roman numeral is considered a legally binding expression of a number as in U S Copyright law where an incorrect or ambiguous numeral may invalidate a copyright claim or affect the termination date of the copyright period 3 it is desirable to strictly follow the usual style described below Standard form The following table displays how Roman numerals are usually written 4 Individual decimal places Thousands Hundreds Tens Units1 M C X I2 MM CC XX II3 MMM CCC XXX III4 CD XL IV5 D L V6 DC LX VI7 DCC LXX VII8 DCCC LXXX VIII9 CM XC IXThe numerals for 4 IV and 9 IX are written using subtractive notation 5 where the smaller symbol I is subtracted from the larger one V or X thus avoiding the clumsier IIII and VIIII a Subtractive notation is also used for 40 XL 90 XC 400 CD and 900 CM 6 These are the only subtractive forms in standard use A number containing two or more decimal digits is built by appending the Roman numeral equivalent for each from highest to lowest as in the following examples 39 XXX IX XXXIX 246 CC XL VI CCXLVI 789 DCC LXXX IX DCCLXXXIX 2 421 MM CD XX I MMCDXXI Any missing place represented by a zero in the place value equivalent is omitted as in Latin and English speech 160 C LX CLX 207 CC VII CCVII 1 009 M IX MIX 1 066 M LX VI MLXVI 7 8 The largest number that can be represented in this manner is 3 999 MMMCMXCIX but this is sufficient for the values for which Roman numerals are commonly used today such as year numbers 1776 M DCC LXX VI MDCCLXXVI the date written on the book held by the Statue of Liberty 1918 M CM X VIII MCMXVIII the first year of the Spanish flu pandemic 1944 M CM XL IV MCMXLIV erroneous copyright notice of the 1954 movie The Last Time I Saw Paris 3 2023 MMXXIII this year b Prior to the introduction of Arabic numerals in the West ancient and medieval users of Roman numerals used various means to write larger numbers see large numbers below Other forms Forms exist that vary in one way or another from the general standard represented above Other additive forms nbsp A clock face with the Roman numerals typical for clocks in Bad Salzdetfurth GermanyWhile subtractive notation for 4 40 and 400 IV XL and CD has been the usual form since Roman times additive notation to represent these numbers IIII XXXX and CCCC 9 continued to be used including in compound numbers like 24 XXIIII 10 74 LXXIIII 11 and 490 CCCCLXXXX 12 The additive forms for 9 90 and 900 VIIII 9 LXXXX 13 and DCCCC 14 have also been used although less often The two conventions could be mixed in the same document or inscription even in the same numeral For example on the numbered gates to the Colosseum IIII is systematically used instead of IV but subtractive notation is used for XL consequently gate 44 is labelled XLIIII 15 16 Modern clock faces that use Roman numerals still very often use IIII for four o clock but 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 17 18 19 However this is far from universal for example the clock on the Palace of Westminster tower commonly known as Big Ben uses a subtractive IV for 4 o clock 18 c nbsp The year number on Admiralty Arch London The year 1910 is rendered as MDCCCCX rather than the more usual MCMXSeveral monumental inscriptions created in the early 20th century use variant forms for 1900 usually written MCM These vary from MDCCCCX for 1910 as seen on Admiralty Arch London to the more unusual if not unique MDCDIII for 1903 on the north entrance to the Saint Louis Art Museum 21 Especially on tombstones and other funerary inscriptions 5 and 50 have been occasionally written IIIII and XXXXX instead of V and L and there are instances such as IIIIII and XXXXXX rather than VI or LX 22 23 nbsp Epitaph of centurion Marcus Caelius showing XIIX Other subtractive forms There are numerous historical examples of IIX being used for 8 for example XIIX was used by officers of the XVIII Roman Legion to write their number 24 25 The notation appears prominently on the cenotaph of their senior centurion Marcus Caelius c 45 BC 9 AD On the publicly displayed official Roman calendars known as Fasti XIIX is used for the 18 days to the next Kalends and XXIIX for the 28 days in February The latter can be seen on the sole extant pre Julian calendar the Fasti Antiates Maiores 26 There are historical examples of other subtractive forms IIIXX for 17 27 IIXX for 18 28 IIIC for 97 29 IIC for 98 30 31 and IC for 99 32 A possible explanation is that the word for 18 in Latin is duodeviginti literally two from twenty 98 is duodecentum two from hundred and 99 is undecentum one from hundred 33 However the explanation does not seem to apply to IIIXX and IIIC since the Latin words for 17 and 97 were septendecim seven ten and nonaginta septem ninety seven respectively The ROMAN function in Microsoft Excel supports multiple subtraction modes depending on the Form setting For example the number 499 usually CDXCIX can be rendered as LDVLIV XDIX VDIV or ID The relevant Microsoft help page offers no explanation for this function other than to describe its output as more concise 34 Non standard variants nbsp Padlock used on the north gate of the Irish town of Athlone 1613 in the date is rendered XVIXIII literally 16 13 instead of MDCXIII There are also historical examples of other additive and multiplicative forms and forms which seem to reflect spoken phrases Some of these variants may have been regarded as errors even by contemporaries IIXX was how people associated with the XXII Roman Legion used to write their number The practice may have been due to a common way to say twenty second in Latin namely duo et vice n sima literally two and twentieth rather than the regular vice n sima secunda twenty second 35 Apparently at least one ancient stonecutter mistakenly thought that the IIXX of 22nd Legion stood for 18 and corrected it to XVIII 35 nbsp Excerpt from Bibliotheque nationale de France 36 The Roman numeral for 500 is rendered as C V instead of D There are some examples of year numbers after 1000 written as two Roman numerals 1 99 e g 1613 as XVIXIII corresponding to the common reading sixteen thirteen of such year numbers in English or 1519 as XC V XIX as in French quinze cent dix neuf fifteen hundred and nineteen and similar readings in other languages 37 In some French texts from the 15th century and later one finds constructions like IIIIXXXIX for 99 reflecting the French reading of that number as quatre vingt dix neuf four score and nineteen 37 Similarly in some English documents one finds for example 77 written as iiixxxvii which could be read three score and seventeen 38 A medieval accounting text from 1301 renders numbers like 13 573 as XIII M V C III XX XIII that is 13 1000 5 100 3 20 13 39 Other numerals that do not fit the usual patterns such as VXL for 45 instead of the usual XLV may be due to scribal errors or the writer s lack of familiarity with the system rather than being genuine variant usage Non numeric combinations As Roman numerals are composed of ordinary alphabetic characters there may sometimes be confusion with other uses of the same letters For example XXX and XL have other connotations in addition to their values as Roman numerals while IXL more often than not is a gramogram of I excel and is in any case not an unambiguous Roman numeral 40 Zero As a non positional numeral system Roman numerals have no place keeping zeros Furthermore the system as used by the Romans lacked a numeral for the number zero itself that is what remains after 1 is subtracted from 1 The word nulla the Latin word meaning none was used to represent 0 although the earliest attested instances are medieval For instance Dionysius Exiguus used nulla alongside Roman numerals in a manuscript from 525 AD 41 42 About 725 Bede or one of his colleagues used the letter N the initial of nulla or of nihil the Latin word for nothing for 0 in a table of epacts all written in Roman numerals 43 The use of N to indicate none long survived in the historic apothecaries system of measurement used well into the 20th century to designate quantities in pharmaceutical prescriptions 44 Fractions nbsp A triens coin 1 3 or 4 12 of an as Note the four dots indicating its value nbsp A semis coin 1 2 or 6 12 of an as Note the S indicating its value The base Roman fraction is S indicating 1 2 The use of S as in VIIS to indicate 71 2 is attested in some ancient inscriptions 45 and also in the now rare apothecaries system usually in the form SS 44 but while Roman numerals for whole numbers are essentially decimal S does not correspond to 5 10 as one might expect but 6 12 The Romans used a duodecimal rather than a decimal system for fractions as 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 Notation for fractions other than 1 2 is mainly found on surviving Roman coins many of which had values that were duodecimal fractions of the unit as Fractions less than 1 2 are indicated by a dot for each uncia twelfth the source of the English words inch and ounce dots are repeated for fractions up to five twelfths Six twelfths one half is S for semis half Uncia dots were added to S for fractions from seven to eleven twelfths just as tallies were added to V for whole numbers from six to nine 46 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 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 singular Meaning1 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 Other Roman fractional notations included the following Fraction Roman numeral Name nominative and genitive singular Meaning1 1728 12 3 Siliqua siliquae1 288 Scripulum scripuli scruple 1 144 12 2 Ƨ Dimidia sextula dimidiae sextulae half a sextula 1 72 Ƨ Sextula sextulae 1 6 of an uncia 1 48 Ↄ Sicilicus sicilici1 36 ƧƧ Binae sextulae binarum sextularum Exceptionally these are plural forms two sextulas duella duellae 1 24 S or or Ye Semuncia semunciae 1 2 uncia semi uncia 1 8 S or or Ye Sescuncia sescunciae 1 1 2 uncias sesqui uncia Large numbers The Romans developed two main ways of writing large numbers the apostrophus and the vinculum further extended in various ways in later times Apostrophus nbsp 1630 on the Westerkerk in Amsterdam M and D are given archaic apostrophus form Using the apostrophus method 47 500 is written as IↃ while 1 000 is written as CIↃ 20 This system of encasing numbers to denote thousands imagine the C s and Ↄ s as parentheses had its origins in Etruscan numeral usage Each additional set of C and Ↄ surrounding CIↃ raises the value by a factor of ten CCIↃↃ represents 10 000 and CCCIↃↃↃ represents 100 000 Similarly each additional Ↄ to the right of IↃ raises the value by a factor of ten IↃↃ represents 5 000 and IↃↃↃ represents 50 000 Numerals larger than CCCIↃↃↃ do not occur 48 nbsp Page from a 16th century manual showing a mixture of apostrophus and vinculum numbers see in particular the ways of writing 10 000 IↃ 500 CIↃ 1 000 IↃↃ 5 000 CCIↃↃ 10 000 IↃↃↃ 50 000 CCCIↃↃↃ 100 000Sometimes CIↃ 1000 is reduced to IↃↃ 5 000 to CCIↃↃ 10 000 to IↃↃↃ 50 000 to and CCCIↃↃↃ 100 000 to 49 It is likely IↃ 500 reduced to D and CIↃ 1000 influenced the later M John Wallis is often credited with introducing the symbol for infinity and one conjecture is that he based it on since 1 000 was hyperbolically used to represent very large numbers Vinculum Using the vinculum conventional Roman numerals are multiplied by 1 000 by adding a bar or overline thus 49 IV 4 000 XXV 25 000The vinculumcame into use in the late Republic 50 and it was a common alternative to the apostrophic during the Imperial era around the Roman world M for 1000 was not in use until the Medieval period 51 52 It continued in use in the Middle Ages though it became known more commonly as titulus 53 and it appears in modern editions of classical and medieval Latin texts 54 55 In an extension of the vinculum a three sided box now sometimes printed as two vertical lines and a vinculum is used to multiply by 100 000 56 50 thus XIII XXXII p 1 332 000 paces 1 332 Roman miles d 55 Vinculum notation is distinct from the custom of adding an overline to a numeral simply to indicate that it is a number Both usages can be seen on Roman inscriptions of the same period and general location such as on the Antonine Wall 57 58 OriginThe system is closely associated with the ancient city state of Rome and the Empire that it created However due to the scarcity of surviving examples the origins of the system are obscure and there are several competing theories all largely conjectural Etruscan numerals Main article Etruscan numerals Rome was founded sometime between 850 and 750 BC At the time the region was inhabited by diverse populations of which the Etruscans were the most advanced The ancient Romans themselves admitted that the basis of much of their civilization was Etruscan Rome itself was located next to the southern edge of the Etruscan domain which covered a large part of north central Italy The Roman numerals in particular are directly derived from the Etruscan number symbols and 𐌟 for 1 5 10 50 and 100 they had more symbols for larger numbers but it is unknown which symbol represents which number As in the basic Roman system the Etruscans wrote the symbols that added to the desired number from higher to lower value Thus the number 87 for example would be written 50 10 10 10 5 1 1 this would appear as since Etruscan was written from right to left 59 The symbols and resembled letters of the Etruscan alphabet but and 𐌟 did not The Etruscans used the subtractive notation too but not like the Romans They wrote 17 18 and 19 as and mirroring the way they spoke those numbers three from twenty etc and similarly for 27 28 29 37 38 etc However they did not write for 4 nor for 40 and wrote and for 7 8 and 9 respectively 59 Early Roman numerals The early Roman numerals for 1 10 and 100 were the Etruscan ones and 𐌟 The symbols for 5 and 50 changed from and to V and at some point The latter had flattened to an inverted T by the time of Augustus and soon afterwards became identified with the graphically similar letter L 48 The symbol for 100 was written variously as 𐌟 or ↃIC and was then abbreviated to Ↄ or C with C which matched the Latin letter C finally winning out It might have helped that C was the initial letter of CENTUM Latin for hundred The numbers 500 and 1000 were denoted by V or X overlaid with a box or circle Thus 500 was like a Ɔ superimposed on a or making it look like TH It became D or D 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 a CIↃ and half of a thousand or five hundred is the right half of the symbol IↃ and this may have been converted into D 20 The notation for 1000 was a circled or boxed X and by Augustinian times was partially identified with the Greek letter F phi Over time the symbol changed to PS and The latter symbol further evolved into then and eventually changed to M under the influence of the Latin word mille thousand 48 According to Paul Kayser the basic numerical symbols were I X 𐌟 and F or and the intermediate ones were derived by taking half of those half an X is V half a 𐌟 is and half a F is D Then 𐌟 and developed as mentioned above 60 nbsp Entrance to section LII 52 of the Colosseum with numerals still visibleClassical Roman numerals The Colosseum was constructed in Rome in CE 72 80 61 and while the original perimeter wall has largely disappeared the numbered entrances from XXIII 23 to LIIII 54 survive 62 to demonstrate that in Imperial times Roman numerals had already assumed their classical form as largely standardised in current use The most obvious anomaly a common one that persisted for centuries is the inconsistent use of subtractive notation while XL is used for 40 IV is avoided in favour of IIII in fact gate 44 is labelled XLIIII Use in the Middle Ages and RenaissanceLower case or minuscule 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 i ii iii iv and so on nbsp 13th century example of iiij Since the Middle Ages a j has sometimes been substituted for the final i of a lower case Roman numeral such as iij for 3 or vij for 7 This j can be considered a swash variant of i Into the early 20th century the use of a final j was still sometimes used in medical prescriptions to prevent tampering with or misinterpretation of a number after it was written 63 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 A for V or Q for D while others serve as abbreviations for compound numerals O for XI or F for XL Although they are still listed today in some dictionaries they are long out of use 64 A superscript o sometimes written directly above the symbol was sometimes used as an ordinal indicator 65 Number Medievalabbreviation Notes and etymology5 A Resembles an upside down V Also said to equal 500 6 Either from a ligature of VI or from digamma ϛ the Greek numeral 6 sometimes conflated with the st ligature 48 7 S Z Presumed abbreviation of septem Latin for 7 9 5 X Scribal abbreviation an x with a slash through it Likewise IX represented 8 511 O Presumed abbreviation of onze French for 11 40 F Presumed abbreviation of English forty 70 S Also could stand for 7 with the same derivation 80 R90 N Presumed abbreviation of nonaginta Latin for 90 Ambiguous with N for nothing nihil 150 Y Possibly derived from the lowercase y s shape 151 K Unusual origin unknown also said to stand for 250 66 160 T Possibly derived from Greek tetra as 4 40 160 200 H Could also stand for 2 see also the symbol for the dupondius From a barring of two I s 250 E300 B400 P G500 Q Redundant with D abbreviates quingenti Latin for 500 Also sometimes used for 500 000 67 800 W Borrowed from Gothic 900 ϡ Borrowed from Gothic 2000 ZChronograms messages with dates encoded into them were popular during the Renaissance era The chronogram would be a phrase containing the letters I V X L C D and M By putting these letters together the reader would obtain a number usually indicating a particular year Modern useBy the 11th century 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 nbsp 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 and are usually read as ordinals e g II is pronounced the second This tradition began in Europe sporadically in the Middle Ages gaining widespread use in England 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 Louis XIV of France and William IV of Great Britain seem to have preferred the use of IIII instead of IV on their coinage see illustration Generational suffixes particularly in the U S for people sharing the same name across generations for example William Howard Taft IV These are also usually read as ordinals 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 Outside reference to the work will use regular Arabic numerals nbsp The year of construction of the Cambridge Public Library USA 1888 displayed in standard Roman numerals on its facade Hour marks on timepieces In this context 4 is often written IIII The year of construction on building facades and cornerstones Page numbering of prefaces and introductions of books and sometimes of appendices and annexes too Book volume and chapter numbers as well as the several acts within a play e g Act iii Scene 2 Sequels to some films video games and other works as in Rocky II Grand Theft Auto V Myst III Exile 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 XXI Olympic Winter Games the Games of the XXX Olympiad The Super Bowl the annual championship game of the National Football League e g Super Bowl XLII Super Bowl 50 was a one time exception 68 WrestleMania the annual professional wrestling event for the WWE e g WrestleMania XXX This usage has also been inconsistent Specific disciplines In astronautics United States rocket model variants are sometimes designated by Roman numerals e g Titan I Titan II Titan III Saturn I Saturn V In astronomy the natural satellites or moons of the planets are designated by capital Roman numerals appended to the planet s name For example Titan s designation is Saturn VI 69 In chemistry Roman numerals are sometimes used to denote the groups of the periodic table but this has officially been deprecated in favour of Arabic numerals 70 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 education school grades in the sense of year groups rather than test scores are sometimes referred to by a Roman numeral for example grade IX is sometimes seen for grade 9 In entomology the broods of the thirteen and seventeen year periodical cicadas are identified by Roman numerals In graphic design stylised Roman numerals may represent numeric values In law Roman numerals are commonly used to help organize legal codes as part of an alphanumeric outline nbsp Stylised IX represents 9 in unit emblem of 9th Aero Squadron AEF 1918 In mathematics including trigonometry statistics and calculus when a graph includes negative numbers its quadrants are named using I II III and 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 Arabic numerals are used for the actual data represented in the graph 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 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 Roman numeral analysis harmonic function is identified using Roman numerals 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 were used with the now largely obsolete apothecaries system of measurement including SS to denote one half and N to denote zero 44 71 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 sport the team containing the top players and representing a nation or province a club or a school at the highest level in say rugby union is often called the 1st XV while a lower ranking cricket or American football team might be the 3rd XI In tarot Roman numerals with zero are often used to denote the cards of the Major Arcana In theology and biblical scholarship the Septuagint is often referred to as LXX as this translation of the Old Testament into Greek is named for the legendary number of its translators septuaginta being Latin for seventy Modern use in European languages other than English Some uses that are rare or never seen in English speaking countries may be relatively common in parts of continental Europe and in other regions e g Latin America that use a European language other than English For instance Capital or small capital Roman numerals are widely used in Romance languages to denote centuries e g the French XVIII e siecle 72 and the Spanish siglo XVIII not XVIII siglo for 18th century Slavic and Turkic languages in and adjacent to Russia similarly favor Roman numerals e g Russian xviii vek Azeri xviii esr On the other hand in Turkish and Slavic languages in Central Europe like most Germanic languages one writes 18 with a period before the local word for century e g Turkish 18 yuzyil Czech 18 stoleti nbsp Boris Yeltsin s signature dated 10 November 1988 rendered as 10 XI 88 Mixed Roman and 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 Arabic numerals 4 VI 1789 and VI 4 1789 both refer unambiguously to 4 June 1789 nbsp Business hours table on a shop window in Vilnius Lithuania 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 73 and also sometimes in railway and bus timetables Monday taken as the first day of the week is represented by I Sunday is represented by 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 nbsp Sign at 17 9 km on route SS4 Salaria north of Rome Italy Roman numerals may also be used for floor numbering 74 75 For instance apartments in central Amsterdam are indicated as 138 III with both an 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 I to IX for the smaller intervals The sign IX 17 thus marks 17 9 km Certain romance speaking countries use Roman numerals to designate assemblies of their national legislatures For instance the composition of the Italian Parliament from 2018 to 2022 elected in the 2018 Italian general election is called the XVIII Legislature of the Italian Republic or more commonly the XVIII Legislature 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 UnicodeThe Number Forms block of the Unicode computer character set standard has a number of Roman numeral symbols in the range of code points from U 2160 to U 2188 76 This range includes both upper and lowercase numerals as well as pre combined characters for numbers up to 12 or XII One justification for the existence of pre combined numbers is to facilitate the setting of multiple letter numbers such as VIII on a single horizontal line in Asian vertical text The Unicode standard however includes special Roman numeral code points for compatibility only stating that f or most purposes it is preferable to compose the Roman numerals from sequences of the appropriate Latin letters 77 The block also includes some apostrophus symbols for large numbers an old variant of L 50 similar to the Etruscan character the Claudian letter reversed C etc 78 See alsoBiquinary Egyptian numerals Etruscan numerals Greek numerals Hebrew numerals Kharosthi numerals Maya numerals Roman abacus Proto writing Roman numerals in UnicodeReferencesNotes Without theorising about causation it may be noted that IV and IX not only have fewer characters than IIII and VIIII but are less likely to be confused especially at a quick glance with III and VIII This is the Coordinated Universal Time UTC year in which Wikipedia s cache of this page was last updated so may be a few hours out of date Isaac Asimov once mentioned an interesting theory that Romans avoided using IV because it was the initial letters of IVPITER the Latin spelling of Jupiter and might have seemed impious 20 He did not say whose theory it was XIII 13 x 100 000 1 300 000 and XXXII 32 x 1000 32 000 so XIII XXXII 1 332 000 p is a common abbreviation for passus paces the Romans counting a pace as two steps Citations Judkins Maura 4 November 2011 Public clocks do a number on Roman numerals The Washington Post Archived from the original on 15 November 2020 Retrieved 13 August 2019 Most clocks using Roman numerals traditionally use IIII instead of IV One of the rare prominent clocks that uses the IV instead of IIII is Big Ben in London Adams Cecil 23 February 1990 What is the proper way to style Roman numerals for the 1990s The Straight Dope a b Hayes David P Guide to Roman Numerals Copyright Registration and Renewal Information Chart and Web Site Reddy Indra K Khan Mansoor A 2003 1 Working with Arabic and Roman numerals Essential Math and Calculations for Pharmacy Technicians CRC Press p 3 ISBN 978 0 203 49534 6 Table 1 1 Roman and Arabic numerals table very similar to the table here apart from inclusion of Vinculum notation Dehaene Stanislas 1997 The Number Sense How the Mind Creates Mathematics Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199723096 288 pages Hazewinkel Michiel ed 1990 Numbers Representations of Encyclopaedia of Mathematics Vol 6 Springer p 502 ISBN 9781556080050 546 pages Dela Cruz M L P Torres H D 2009 Number Smart Quest for Mastery Teacher s Edition Rex Bookstore Inc ISBN 9789712352164 Martelli Alex Ascher David 2002 Python Cookbook O Reilly Media Inc ISBN 978 0 596 00167 4 a b Gaius Iulius Caesar Commentarii de bello Gallico Book II Section 4 in Latin via Wikisource Book II Section 4 XV milia Atrebates Ambianos X milia Morinos XXV milia Menapios VII milia Caletos X milia Veliocasses et Viromanduos totidem Atuatucos XVIIII milia Book II Section 8 ab utroque latere eius collis transversam fossam obduxit circiter passuum CCCC et ad extremas fossas castella constituit Book IV Section 15 Nostri ad unum omnes incolumes perpaucis vulneratis ex tanti belli timore cum hostium numerus capitum CCCCXXX milium fuisset se in castra receperunt Book VII Section 4 in hiberna remissis ipse se recipit die XXXX Bibracte Rocca Angelo 1612 De campanis commentarius Rome Guillelmo Faciotti Title of a Plate Campana a XXIIII hominibus pulsata Bell to be sounded by 24 men Gerard Ter Borch 1673 Portrait of Cornelis de Graef Date on painting Out XXIIII Jaer M DC LXXIIII Gaius Plinius Secundus Naturalis Historia Book III in Latin via Wikisource Book III Saturni vocatur Caesaream Mauretaniae urbem CCLXXXXVII p assum traiectus reliqua in ora flumen Tader ortus in Cantabris haut procul oppido Iuliobrica per CCCCL p fluens Book IV Epiri Achaiae Atticae Thessalia in porrectum longitudo CCCCLXXXX traditur latitudo CCLXXXXVII Book VI tam vicinum Arsaniae fluere eum in regione Arrhene Claudius Caesar auctor est ut cum intumuere confluant nec tamen misceantur leviorque Arsanias innatet MMMM ferme spatio mox divisus in Euphraten mergatur Bennet Thomas 1731 Grammatica Hebraea cum uberrima praxi in usum tironum Editio tertia T Astley p 24 Copy in the British Library 149 pages Page 24 PRAEFIXA duo sunt viz He emphaticum vel relativum de quo Cap VI Reg LXXXX amp Shin cum Segal sequente Dagesh quod denotat pronomen relativum Della Mirandola Pico 1486 Conclusiones sive Theses DCCCC Conclusions or 900 Theses in Latin 360 12 tables 24 chairs and plenty of chalk Roman Numerals not quite so simple 2 January 2011 Paul Lewis Roman Numerals How they work 13 November 2021 Milham W I 1947 Time amp Timekeepers New York Macmillan p 196 a b Pickover Clifford A 2003 Wonders of Numbers Adventures in Mathematics Mind and Meaning Oxford University Press p 282 ISBN 978 0 19 534800 2 Adams Cecil Zotti Ed 1988 More of the straight dope Ballantine Books p 154 ISBN 978 0 345 35145 6 a b c Asimov Isaac 1966 Asimov on Numbers PDF Pocket Books a division of Simon amp Schuster Inc p 12 Gallery Museum s North Entrance 1910 Saint Louis Art Museum Archived from the original on 4 December 2010 Retrieved 10 January 2014 The inscription over the North Entrance to the Museum reads Dedicated to Art and Free to All MDCDIII These roman numerals translate to 1903 indicating that the engraving was part of the original building designed for the 1904 World s Fair Reynolds Joyce Maire Spawforth Anthony J S 1996 numbers Roman In Hornblower Simon Spawforth Anthony eds Oxford Classical Dictionary 3rd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 866172 X Kennedy Benjamin Hall 1923 The Revised Latin Primer London Longmans Green amp Co Adkins Lesley Adkins Roy A 2004 Handbook to life in ancient Rome 2 ed Facts On File p 270 ISBN 0 8160 5026 0 Boyne William 1968 A manual of Roman coins p 13 Degrassi Atilius ed 1963 Inscriptiones Italiae Vol 13 Fasti et Elogia Rome Istituto Poligrafico dello Stato Fasciculus 2 Fasti anni Numani et Iuliani Lundorphio Michaele Gaspar 1621 Acta publica inter invictissimos gloriosissimosque amp c et Ferdinandum II Romanorum Imperatores in Latin Ian Friderici Weissii p 123 Page 123 Sub Dato Pragae IIIXX Decemb A C M DC IIXX Page 126 end of the same document Dabantur Pragae 17 Decemb M DC IIXX Sulpicius a Munscrod Raphael 1621 Vera Ac Germana Detecto Clandestinarvm Deliberationvm in Latin p 16 Page 16 line 1 repertum Originale Subdatum IIIXXX Aug A C MDC IIXX Page 41 upper right corner Decemb A C MDC IIXX Page 42 upper left corner Febr A C MDC XIX Page 70 IIXX die Maij sequentia in consilio noua ex Bohemia allata Page 71 XIX Maij Tentzel Wilhelm Ernst 1699 Als Ihre Konigl Majestat in Pohlen und in German p 39 Page 39 und der Umschrifft LITHUANIA ASSERTA M DC IIIC 1699 Posner Johann Caspar 1698 Mvndvs ante mvndvm sive De Chao Orbis Primordio in Latin Title page Ad diem jvlii A O R M DC IIC Tentzel Wilhelm Ernst 1700 Saxonia Nvmismatica Das ist Die Historie Des Durchlauchtigsten in German p 26 Page 26 Die Revers hat eine feine Inscription SERENISSIMO DN DN SENATUS QVERNF A M DC IIC D 18 OCT year 1698 day 18 oct Piccolomini Enea Silvio 1698 Opera Geographica et Historica in Latin 1st ed Helmstadt J M Sustermann Title page of first edition Bibliopolae ibid M DC IC Kennedy Benjamin H 1879 Latin grammar London Longmans Green and Co p 150 ISBN 9781177808293 ROMAN function support microsoft com a b Malone Stephen James 2005 Legio XX Valeria Victrix A Prosographical and Historical Study PDF Thesis Vol 2 University of Nottingham On page 396 it discusses many coins with Leg IIXX and notes that it must be Legion 22 The footnote on that page says The form IIXX clearly reflecting the Latin duo et vicensima twenty second cf X5398 legatus I eg II I et vicensim ae Pri mi g VI 1551 legatus leg IIXX Prj III 14207 7 miles leg IIXX and III 10471 3 a vexillation drawn from four German legions including XVIII PR surely here the stonecutter s hypercorrection for IIXX PR L Atre perilleux et Yvain le chevalier au lion 1301 1350 a b Gachard M 1862 II Analectes historiques neuvieme serie nos CCLXI CCLXXXIV Bulletin de la Commission royale d Historie 31 3 345 554 doi 10 3406 bcrh 1862 3033 Page 347 Lettre de Philippe le Beau aux echevins quote Escript en nostre ville de Gand le XXIIIIme de febvrier l an IIIIXXXIX quatre vingt dix neuf 99 Page 356 Lettre de l achiduchesse Marguerite au conseil de Brabant quote Escript a Bruxelles le dernier jour de juing anno XVcXIX 1519 Page 374 Letters patentes de la remission de la ville de Bruxelles quote Op heden tweentwintich twenty two daegen in decembri anno vyfthien hondert tweendertich fifteen hundred thirty two Gegeven op ten vyfsten dach in deser jegewoirdige maent van decembri anno XV tweendertich 1532 vorschreven Page 419 Acte du duc de Parme portant approbation quote Faiet le XVme de juillet XVc huytante six 1586 Salter Herbert Edward 1923 Registrum Annalium Collegii Mertonensis 1483 1521 Vol 76 Oxford Historical Society 544 pages Page 184 has the computation in pounds shillings pence li s d x iii iiii xxi viii viii xlv xiiii i iiixxxvii vi i i e 10 3 4 21 8 8 45 14 1 77 6 1 de Sancto Justo Johannis 1865 1301 de Wailly Delisle ed E Duo Codicibus Ceratis From Two Texts in Wax in Latin a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a work ignored help Volume 22 of Recueil des historiens des Gaules et de la France Page 530 SUMMA totalis XIII M V C III XX XIII l III s XI d Sum total 13 thousand 5 hundred 3 score 13 livres 3 sous 11 deniers Our Brand Story SPC Ardmona Retrieved 11 March 2014 Bede The Reckoning of Time Translated by Wallis Faith Liverpool Liverpool University Press 2004 725 ISBN 0 85323 693 3 Baker Peter S Lapidge Michael eds 1995 1016 Byrhtferth s Enchiridion Early English Text Society ISBN 978 0 19 722416 8 Jones C W ed Opera Didascalica Corpus Christianorum Series Latina Vol 123C a b c Bachenheimer Bonnie S 2010 Manual for Pharmacy Technicians ISBN 978 1 58528 307 1 RIB 2208 Distance Slab of the Sixth Legion Roman Inscriptions in Britain Retrieved 11 November 2020 Maher David W Makowski John F 2011 Literary Evidence for Roman Arithmetic with Fractions PDF Classical Philology 96 4 376 399 doi 10 1086 449557 S2CID 15162149 Archived from the original PDF on 27 August 2013 Definition of Apostrophus www merriam webster com a b c d Perry David J Proposal to Add Additional Ancient Roman Characters to UCS PDF Archived from the original PDF on 22 June 2011 a b 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 amp Sons a b Dilke Oswald Ashton Wentworth 1987 Mathematics and measurement Reading the past London British Museum Publications p 15 ISBN 978 0 7141 8067 0 Chrisomalis Stephen 2010 Numerical Notation A Comparative History Cambridge University Press pp 102 109 ISBN 978 0 521 87818 0 Gordon Arthur E 1982 Illustrated Introduction to Latin Epigraphy Berkeley University of California Press pp 122 123 ISBN 0 520 05079 7 Chrisomalis Stephen 2010 Numerical Notation A Comparative History Cambridge University Press p 119 ISBN 978 0 521 87818 0 Boethius 1867 6th century AD De Institutione Arithmetica libri duo PDF B G Teubner p 42 Retrieved 18 January 2023 a b Pliny 1961 1st century AD Natural History Loeb Classical Library Vol L352 Harvard University Press Book VI XXVI 100 pp 414 415 Chrisomalis Stephen 2010 Numerical Notation A Comparative History Cambridge University Press pp 402 403 ISBN 978 0 521 87818 0 RIB 2208 Distance Slab of the Twentieth Legion Roman Inscriptions in Britain Retrieved 9 November 2020 RIB 2171 Building Inscription of the Second and Twentieth Legions Roman Inscriptions in Britain Retrieved 9 November 2020 a b Van Heems Gilles 2009 Nombre chiffre lettre Formes et reformes Des notations chiffrees de l etrusque Between Numbers and Letters About Etruscan Notations of Numeral Sequences Revue de philologie de litterature et d histoire anciennes in French 83 1 103 130 ISSN 0035 1652 Keyser Paul 1988 The Origin of the Latin Numerals 1 to 1000 American Journal of Archaeology 92 4 529 546 doi 10 2307 505248 JSTOR 505248 S2CID 193086234 Hopkins Keith 2005 The Colosseum Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01895 2 Claridge Amanda 1998 Rome An Oxford Archaeological Guide First ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 288003 1 Bastedo Walter A Materia Medica Pharmacology Therapeutics and Prescription Writing for Students and Practitioners 2nd ed Philadelphia PA W B Saunders 1919 p582 Retrieved 15 March 2010 Capelli A 1912 Dictionary of Latin Abbreviations Archived copy Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 25 January 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Bang Jorgen 1962 Fremmedordbog in Danish Berlingske Ordboger Gordon Arthur E 1983 Illustrated Introduction to Latin Epigraphy University of California Press p 44 ISBN 9780520038981 Retrieved 3 October 2015 NFL won t use Roman numerals for Super Bowl 50 National Football League Archived from the original on 1 December 2015 Retrieved 5 November 2014 Planetary Satellite Discovery Circumstances JPL Solar System Dynamics NASA 15 November 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2022 Fluck E 1988 New Notations in the Periodic Table PDF Pure Appl Chem IUPAC 60 3 431 436 doi 10 1351 pac198860030431 S2CID 96704008 Retrieved 24 March 2012 Reddy Indra K Khan Mansoor A 2003 Essential Math and Calculations for Pharmacy Technicians CRC Press ISBN 978 0 203 49534 6 Lexique des regles typographiques en usage a l imprimerie nationale in French 6th ed Paris Imprimerie nationale March 2011 p 126 ISBN 978 2 7433 0482 9 On composera en chiffres romains petites capitales les nombres concernant 1 Les siecles Beginners latin nationalarchives gov uk Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 1 December 2013 Roman Arithmetic Southwestern Adventist University Archived from the original on 22 November 2013 Retrieved 1 December 2013 Roman Numerals History Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 1 December 2013 Unicode Number Forms PDF The Unicode Standard Version 6 0 Electronic edition PDF Unicode Inc 2011 p 486 Roman symbol symbolonly com SourcesMenninger Karl 1992 Number Words and Number Symbols A Cultural History of Numbers Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 27096 8 Further readingAczel 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 Roman Numerals Totally Epic Guide Know The Romans Roman numerals at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman numerals amp oldid 1188781837, 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.