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As 2000 dawns, the question of representing the year in Roman numerals becomes a lot easier than it
was in 1999. 2000 is simply MM. But at the start of last year there was considerable controversy in the
press both in the US and in the UK about the representation of 1999 in Roman numerals (In the USA
see Baltimore Sun 27/12/98; Washington Post 31/12/98; In London, The Times, The Guardian, and
BBC Online all dated 1/1/99). In fact, although there are alternative ways of depicting 1999 using
Roman numerals, only two or three stand up to scrutiny.
There are several rules used in depicting numbers using the roman numerals I (1), V (5), X (10), L
(50), C (100), D (500), M (1000). Some of these were more strictly adhered to than others. Normally,
the numerals were simply written out in descending order in a long line so CCXXXV is 235. But
another rule allowed the I, X, or C to be placed to the left of a bigger number and subtracted from it.
So IV is 4, XIX is 19. The Romans used the subtraction rule, but not always. Doorway numbers at the
Colosseum in Rome (c.80AD) show 40 as XL but 44 as XLIIII rather than XLIV.
But one rule is never broken. The Romans strictly represented units, tens, hundreds, and thousands as
separate items in their numbers. That is probably because the numerals represented numbers as they
were depicted on an abacus - a calculating machine using pebbles or beads which were arranged from
right to left in columns of units, tens, hundreds, thousands etc. That means that 99 could be represented
as XCIX - 90+9 but never as IC. Similarly, 999 cannot be IM and 1999 cannot be MIM. A
consequence of this strict place rule is that an I can only be used to the left of a V or an X; an X can
only be used to the left of an L or a C. And a C can only be used to the left of a D or an M.
So the only possible Roman numerical combinations for 1999 are the following