It’s always bugged me that the Roman numerals didn’t try to follow the alphabet. Also, what is the next denomination after “M”? - Jinx
I represents the finger. The most primitive way to count, right? All God’s chillun gots fingers.
V represents the hand, a shortcut way to suggest five fingers at once.
X is just two hands added together. Two V-shapes placed end to end.
L — I don’t know how L came to represent 50. You got me there.
C — abbreviation for centum.
D — again, beats me.
M — abbreviation for mille.
The numbers higher than 1,000 are shown by writing a horizontal bar over the figure, which means ‘multiply by 1,000’. So M with a bar over it = 1,000,000.
The Romans
D comes from an alternate way the Romans wrote numbers over 100. 1000 was represented by a symbol that was a vertical line with loops to each side, sort of like this (|) only the straight line extended past the loops. 500 was half that symbol. That is, they left off one of the loops, which resulted in something that looked like a D.
This system could go higher. 5000 was |)) and 10,000 was ((|)). I don’t think it went over 100,000 though.
Note that the real Romans reputedly used their Roman Numerals differently than we do. For example, they often used “IIII” to indicate “4”, and using the variant “IV” was a shorthand that developed later on (my source says Middle Ages).
Cecil talks about the whole IIII vs. IV mystery in this column.
I read in an encyclopedia that the Romans didn’t use IV for 4 as they normally would, because that spelled the beginning of the god-name IVPITER. So as not to be blasphemous, they substituted IIII. Similarly, in Hebrew numeration the number 15 would normally be written yod-heh (yod=10 and heh=5), but because that spelled the divine name Jah it would be sacrilegious to use it profanely, so the Hebrews substituted teth-vav (teth=9 and vav=6) for 15.
L is half of C – graphically as well as numerically. This is hard to represent with HTML-specific symbols, but look at it this way, remembering that we’re talking archaic Latin alphabet, not modern Italic or Gothic letters, here:
_
|
|_ is 100; |_ is 50.
The other way to write numbers over 3,999 besides the (I) style was with macrons – a long bar over the top of a letter.
_
V would be 5,000
_
X would be 10,000
and so on.