Etruscan numerals
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Cite This SourceThe Etruscan numerals were used by the ancient Etruscans. The system was adapted from the Greek Attic numerals and formed the inspiration for the later Roman numerals.
| Etruscan | Decimal | Symbol * |
|---|---|---|
| θu | 1 | I |
| maχ | 5 | Λ |
| śar | 10 | X |
| muvalχ | 50 | ↑ |
| ? | 100 | C or Ж |
There is very little surviving evidence of these numerals. Examples are known of the symbols for larger numbers, but it is unknown which symbol represents which number.
Thanks to the numbers written out on the Tuscania dice, there is agreement about the fact that zal, ci, huθ and śa are the numbers up to 6 (besides 1 and 5). The assignment depends on the answer to the question whether the numbers on opposite faces on Etruscan dice add up to seven, like nowadays. It is a fact that some dice found don't show this proposed pattern.
An interesting aspect of the Etruscan numeral system is that some numbers, like in the Roman system, are represented as partial subtractions. So "17" is not written *semφ-śar as users of the Hindu-Arabic (Western) numeral system might reason. We instead find Despite the continuing debate specifically about which of Note. Recently (2006) S. A. Yatsemirsky (PDF) has presented evidence that zar = śar meant ‘12’ (cf. zal ‘2’ and zaθrum ‘20’) while halχ meant ‘10’. According to his interpretation the attested form huθzar was used for ‘sixteen’, not ‘fourteen’.
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia © 2001-2006 Wikipedia contributors (Disclaimer)The general consensus
Etruscan
Decimal
θu
one
zal
two
ci
three
huθ
four
maχ
five
śa
six
semφ
seven
cezp
eight
nurφ
nine
śar
ten
*θuśar
eleven
*zalśar
twelve
*ciśar
thirteen
huθzar
fourteen
*maχśar
fifteen
*śaśar
sixteen
ciem zaθrum
seventeen
eslem zaθrum
eighteen
θunem zaθrum
nineteen
zaθrum
20
cealχ
30
*huθalχ
40
muvalχ
50
śealχ
60
semφalχ
70
cezpalχ
80
*nurφalχ
90
See also
External links
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Last updated on Thursday October 04, 2007 at 05:07:58 PDT (GMT -0700)
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