Convert numbers to and from Roman numerals
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Cornerstones and Permanence
Walk through any old city center and you'll find Roman numerals carved into stone: MCMXXIV on a courthouse, MDCCCLXXVI on a church. A cornerstone reading "1924" looks like a label. One reading MCMXXIV looks like a declaration. The angular shapes — all straight lines, no curves — are ideal for carving and engraving, weathering centuries of rain and wind.
Read more →Can People Actually Read Them?
Ask the average person what number Super Bowl LVIII is, and you'll get a lot of confident wrong answers. But it doesn't matter. The Roman numerals aren't there to communicate a number efficiently. They're there to communicate importance. When you see LVIII, you don't need to know it's 58. You need to feel that this is an event with history and weight.
Read more →Where do Roman numerals come from?
It is thought Roman numerals come from hand signals and tally marks. The stroke I represents a finger, the V represents the gap between thumb and fingers for five, and the X represents hands crossed for ten. The L, C, D, and M come from modifications of Greek letters like chi, theta, and phi to represent 50, 100, 500, and 1,000. Over time, these marks changed into the Latin letters people recognize today. There is no 0 in the Roman alphabet, as the concept for the number 0 didn't fully develop until India invented it around 600 CE / 10600 HE.