Greek numerals

numeration system used by the Koine Greek and earlier
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Greek numerals are a system of representing numbers using letters of the Greek alphabet. They are also known by the names Milesian numerals, Alexandrian numerals, or alphabetic numerals. In modern Greece, they are still in use for ordinal numbers, and in much of the same way that Roman numerals are in the West; for ordinary (cardinal) numbers, Arabic numerals are used.

Numeral systems by culture
Hindu–Arabic numerals
Western Arabic
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Khmer
Indian family
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Counting rods
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Alphabetic numerals
Abjad
Armenian
Cyrillic
Ge'ez
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Greek (Ionian)
Āryabhaṭa
 
Other systems
Attic
Babylonian
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List of numeral system topics
Positional systems by base
Decimal (10)
2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64
1, 3, 9, 12, 20, 24, 30, 36, 60, more…

At first, before it was used more, the Greek alphabet, Linear A and Linear B had used a different system with symbols for 1, 10, 100, 1000 and 10000 operating with the following formula: | = 1, – = 10, ◦ = 100, ¤ = 1000, ☼ = 10000.[1]

The earliest alphabet-related system of numerals used with the Greek letters was a set of the acrophonic Attic numerals, operating much like Roman numerals (which derived from this scheme), with the following formula: Ι = 1, Γ = 5, Δ = 10, ΓΔ = 50, Η = 100, ΓΗ = 500, Χ = 1000, ΓΧ = 5000, Μ = 10000 and ΓΜ = 50000.

The acrophonic system was replaced by a new alphabetic system, sometimes called the Ionic numeral system, from the 4th century BC. Each unit (1, 2, …, 9) was assigned a separate letter, each tens (10, 20, …, 90) a separate letter, and each hundreds (100, 200, …, 900) a separate letter. This requires 27 letters, so the 24-letter Greek alphabet was extended by using three obsolete letters: fau ϝ, (also used are stigmaϛ or, in modern Greek, ΣΤ) for 6, koppa ϟ for 90, and sampi ϡ for 900.[2] To distinguish numerals from letters they are followed by the "keraia" (Greek κεραίαinsect antenna), a symbol similar to an acute sign (Unicode U+0374).

Fau (also spelled vau, pronounced wow) may also be called digamma. The two are the same in meaning, and either symbol may be used to represent the number 6.

This alphabetic system operates on the additive principle in which the numeric values of the letters are added together to form the total. For example, 241 is represented as ΣΜΑʹ (200 + 40 + 1).

To represent numbers from 1,000 to 999,999 the same letters are reused to serve as thousands, tens of thousands, and hundreds of thousands. A "left keraia" (Unicode U+0375, ‘Greek Lower Numeral Sign’) is put in front of thousands to distinguish.

Ancient Byzantine Modern Value Ancient Byzantine Modern Value Ancient Byzantine Modern Value Ancient Byzantine Modern Value
α Αʹ 1 ι Ιʹ 10 ρ Ρʹ 100  &  ͵α ͵Α 1000
β Βʹ 2 κ Κʹ 20 σ Σʹ 200 ͵β ͵Β 2000
γ Γʹ 3 λ Λʹ 30 τ Τʹ 300 ͵ ͵Γ 3000
δ Δʹ 4 μ Μʹ 40 υ Υʹ 400 ͵ ͵Δ 4000
ε Εʹ 5 ν Νʹ 50 φ Φʹ 500 ͵ε ͵Ε 5000

 & 
 & 
Ϛʹ
ΣΤʹ
6 ξ Ξʹ 60 χ Χʹ 600 ͵ & ͵
͵ & ͵
͵Ϛ
͵ΣΤ
6000
ζ Ζʹ 7 ο Οʹ 70 ψ Ψʹ 700 ͵ζ ͵Z 7000
η Ηʹ 8 π Πʹ 80 ω Ωʹ 800 ͵η ͵H 8000
θ Θʹ 9
 & 
 & 
Ϟʹ 90
 & 
 & 
 & 

 & 
 & 
Ϡʹ 900 ͵θ ͵Θ 9000

Higher numbers

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The Greeks also used the myriad to denote 10,000 (Μʹ) and the myriad myriad for one hundred million (ΜΜʹ).

Decimal Symbol Greek numeral
1 Ι εἷς (eis)
5 Γ πέντε (pente)
10 Δ δέκα (deka)
100 Η ἑκατόν (hekaton)
1000 Χ χίλιοι (chilioi)
10000 Μ μύριοι (myrioi)

Other websites

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References

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  1. "Systèmes numéraux en Grèce ancienne: description et mise en perspective historique". Archived from the original on 2010-02-02. Retrieved 2008-07-30.
  2. "Numerals: Stigma, Koppa, Sampi". Archived from the original on 2008-04-08. Retrieved 2008-07-30.