Why does the west use Arabic Numerals? (Short Animated Documentary)

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  • Опубликовано: 18 янв 2025

Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @LUKE-lo7sh
    @LUKE-lo7sh 4 года назад +20556

    a roman walks into a bar, holds up 2 fingers and says "five beers please"

    • @georgeamesfort3408
      @georgeamesfort3408 4 года назад +886

      *Noice*

    • @alexandrub8786
      @alexandrub8786 4 года назад +452

      That means that if he would do andrew's cross(the one on the scottish flag) he would want X or 10.

    • @chairmanmeow3884
      @chairmanmeow3884 4 года назад +123

      Change it into 8, for more relevancy

    • @Turki-968
      @Turki-968 4 года назад +76

      Stolen from the Microsoft version of Google or Alexa

    • @SWNerd
      @SWNerd 4 года назад +19

      turki alhaddabi cortana

  • @Cpt2much
    @Cpt2much 4 года назад +7171

    Seeing History Matters explain multiplication in Roman numerals gave me a stroke

    • @DarkMatterKid
      @DarkMatterKid 4 года назад +815

      Hence why we stopped using them

    • @3bydacreekside
      @3bydacreekside 4 года назад +195

      I might be able to get it after 30 tries on just that number

    • @brandonlyon730
      @brandonlyon730 4 года назад +292

      There was no zero in roman numeral’s either so there wasn’t much you can do to represent nothing of an amount.

    • @appleslover
      @appleslover 4 года назад +35

      Try to use another base and wonder what will you have after that.

    • @GuyNamedSean
      @GuyNamedSean 4 года назад +54

      apple's lover - I dunno, Base 12 is pretty easy to understand, you just have to get used to 10 meaning twelve and having two new symbols. Base 2 is also easy because there's so little to it. I guess computer nerds might also find Base 16 easy because hexadecimal stuff is everywhere in code, but I'm not really too used to it.

  • @alandolawson1924
    @alandolawson1924 3 года назад +2965

    *“And there’s your answer, hence why we got rid of them”*
    That, that right there is why I love this channel

    • @sudind
      @sudind Год назад +22

      Audibly laughed

    • @loneprimate
      @loneprimate Год назад +9

      @@sudind Me too, absolutely loved that line. :D

    • @elKarlo
      @elKarlo Год назад +24

      That last way to do multiplication was basically witchcraft. But yes that and the zingers keep me coming back

    • @donguapo7862
      @donguapo7862 Год назад

      ​@@sudind same

    • @Waydisturbed
      @Waydisturbed Год назад +1

      Agreed!

  • @alabamaal225
    @alabamaal225 3 года назад +2035

    Once the concept of including "Zero" as part of the Arabic numerals set became understood, the triumph of the system was assured.

    • @hellohello9400
      @hellohello9400 3 года назад +228

      They aren’t “Arabic” at all they are Hindu in origin. Lookup who conceptualized and came up with zero.

    • @LeSyd1984
      @LeSyd1984 3 года назад +21

      How do your right zero in Roman Numerals?
      is it: ?

    • @ezazahmed8379
      @ezazahmed8379 3 года назад +207

      @@LeSyd1984 zero came from the Indian concept of 'Shunwa', literally meaning nothingness. The Abbassids were convinced of its usefulness from a certain historical figure you already know the name of. Zero became widespread in the Caliphate arguably more than in India. Hence it became part of the Arabic numeral system.

    • @ebadurrahman7848
      @ebadurrahman7848 3 года назад +14

      @@hellohello9400 numbers Arabic at all? Ha what a joke!!

    • @devashisdas5024
      @devashisdas5024 3 года назад +182

      @@ezazahmed8379 it is called Arabic numerals because Western nations got the system's existence through Arabs. There are many stupid naming happened by them & practiced because of colonial attitude. Decimal system was invented & totally improved in India. Persian scholars like Al-Khwarizmi had practiced & translated them which was used by the Arab merchants & Europeans had chance to get acquainted with the system.

  • @randyramnansingh
    @randyramnansingh 4 года назад +5907

    “And there’s your answer, hence why we got rid of them” - solid explanation haha

    • @lucklamotti5419
      @lucklamotti5419 4 года назад +44

      Lol! Right?!

    • @alexanderblackwood9143
      @alexanderblackwood9143 4 года назад +165

      He said it after showing us the very unintuitive way they multiplied Roman Numerals. I felt just that one example was solid proof, lol

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 3 года назад +96

      @@alexanderblackwood9143 The algorithm he showed may not be how humans multiply today, but it is how every digital computers does multiplication.

    • @Ninja_Octopus
      @Ninja_Octopus 3 года назад +14

      @@annaclarafenyo8185 Really? Why is the most efficient digitally?

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 3 года назад +84

      @@Ninja_Octopus It's because it's fundamentally binary multiplication, and computers use binary because the multiplication table for two digits, 0 and 1, gives a very quick and simple procedure. That's the Egyptian method, it's just normal multiplication in base 2.

  • @afrikasmith1049
    @afrikasmith1049 4 года назад +3597

    Imagine having a calculator that only does Roman Numerals.

    • @LoFiAxolotl
      @LoFiAxolotl 4 года назад +399

      was one of the first tasks i had to do in the early 2000s while studying computer science... i remember us laughing thinking how easy it'd be..... ohhh boy were we wrong

    • @concept5631
      @concept5631 4 года назад +63

      Those poor bastards.

    • @jonathanbuzzard6648
      @jonathanbuzzard6648 4 года назад +167

      @@LoFiAxolotl unless it was banned in the asignment you write a converter from Roman numerals to an int and from an int to Roman numerals and it is as easy as pie. At least that is what I did and got full marks :)

    • @mrrandom1265
      @mrrandom1265 4 года назад +10

      I would buy that

    • @anicecomfybedforyoutosleep7302
      @anicecomfybedforyoutosleep7302 4 года назад +20

      no 80085

  • @nicorhodes837
    @nicorhodes837 4 года назад +1005

    Seeing multiplication done with Roman Numerals made me for the first time understand what true pain felt like.

    • @ArkadiBolschek
      @ArkadiBolschek 4 года назад +45

      And I thought I had it bad at school...

    • @f_f_f_8142
      @f_f_f_8142 4 года назад +20

      That algorithm is actually quite interesting. It equates to the normal school technique used in base 2.

    • @stevenglowacki8576
      @stevenglowacki8576 4 года назад +18

      It's the algorithm generally known as the "Russian Peasant" method, which I learned about sometime in school and for some reason I think it was in an abstract algebra or something similarly high level, not in elementary or secondary school. I have no idea where the name comes from, and on Wikipedia it's found under Ancient Egyptian multiplication, which is very similar but more obviously based on base 2 numbers. I'd never heard of it being used for multiplying Roman numerals, but it's probably easier than trying to replicate the standard way of multiplying numbers written in modern base ten.

    • @joestraw8870
      @joestraw8870 4 года назад +4

      Take your maths exams again but put all the answers in Roman numerals out of spite.

  • @peacebewu
    @peacebewu 3 года назад +74

    In the Philippines, we were taught(iirc) that these were hindu-arabic instead of just "arabi numerals".

    • @Kapoosh000
      @Kapoosh000 3 года назад +12

      Hindu-arabic is more correct. We call them Arabic numerals because we were introduced to them by Arabic people, not because it was only Arabic people who invented them.

    • @dynamitebsb4520
      @dynamitebsb4520 2 года назад +13

      @@Kapoosh000 we in India call it Indian numerals...cause we invented it and we are using it... so that's that

    • @simplygod1035
      @simplygod1035 5 месяцев назад +7

      @@dynamitebsb4520i believe in Arab countries, they refer to their numerals as Indian numerals too

    • @Amen6magi
      @Amen6magi 3 дня назад

      They are persian

  • @nikolaivanov3344
    @nikolaivanov3344 4 года назад +1798

    History matters: *uploads
    The comments: James Bissonete

    • @comradekenobi6908
      @comradekenobi6908 4 года назад +14

      I don't get it, plz explain Russian man

    • @oilersridersbluejays
      @oilersridersbluejays 4 года назад +73

      Don't forget Danny Maloney.

    • @bioshockftw123isBACK
      @bioshockftw123isBACK 4 года назад +49

      What about partyboyco?

    • @PANZERFAUST90
      @PANZERFAUST90 4 года назад +12

      Seriously people need to stop with this stupid shit. He's not the only supporter; his name just usually comes first and it's most likely because he donates the most money.

    • @ArkadiBolschek
      @ArkadiBolschek 4 года назад +24

      The man, the legend.

  • @DanielGalimidi
    @DanielGalimidi 4 года назад +4376

    This reminds of the meme where there's a poll that asks "Should schools in America be forced to teach Arabic numerals as part of their curriculum?" with 43% answering yes and 57% answering no.

  • @CrunchyLlamaToes99
    @CrunchyLlamaToes99 4 года назад +1853

    Today on: “ topic I never would’ve thought of but now that you mention it I’m interested”

    • @joshuaburnett7643
      @joshuaburnett7643 4 года назад +22

      Today on: is this exact comment going to be on the video already

    • @stupidminotaur9735
      @stupidminotaur9735 4 года назад

      their Greek not arabic

    • @jakea5915
      @jakea5915 4 года назад +8

      Today on: "unoriginal comments that somehow get a bunch of likes because people are oblivious"

    • @fakechloe207
      @fakechloe207 4 года назад +6

      @@jakea5915 that's the RUclips comment section in a nutshell.

    • @mojewjewjew4420
      @mojewjewjew4420 4 года назад +4

      @@jakea5915 You mean a bunch of sheep abusing the like button

  • @Hand-in-Shot_Productions
    @Hand-in-Shot_Productions 3 года назад +329

    I found this video to be quite informative! For instance, I never knew that Roman multiplication was so complicated! No wonder we adopted the much-shorter Hindu-Arabic numerals! Thanks for the information!

    • @alyankhan7481
      @alyankhan7481 2 года назад +12

      I never thought I would hear those two names in the same word 🤣 ( hindu and Arabic)

    • @arctrip
      @arctrip 2 года назад +23

      @@alyankhan7481 that’s literally what it’s called

    • @arctrip
      @arctrip 2 года назад +14

      @@زيدأكدي nope. The numeral system used in English and many other languages is called Hindu-Arabic Numeral system.

    • @زيدأكدي
      @زيدأكدي 2 года назад +6

      @@arctrip I don't know where the word Hindu came from. Isn't it supposed to be called Indian or just because whoever invented it is a Hindu? And on the idea of ​​Al-Khwarizmi, the inventor of Arabic numerals is not an Arab. So isn't it supposed to be called Islamic numbers? Of course, this If we go according to what you say, because those who developed Al-Khwarizmi's numbers and used them to create new equations and deliver them to Europe are the Arabs.

    • @maas1208
      @maas1208 2 года назад +7

      That numeral system was actually created by Indian Muslims

  • @briangreen1781
    @briangreen1781 4 года назад +2308

    Imagine doing long division in Roman Numerals? The horror...

    • @violetsky1285
      @violetsky1285 4 года назад +188

      I'd forget my name and existence

    • @Vincent_Quak
      @Vincent_Quak 4 года назад +354

      quantum physics in roman numerals would be hilarious though

    • @weirnershittler6752
      @weirnershittler6752 4 года назад +103

      Vincent Quak how to become insane 101

    • @GuiltyMelly
      @GuiltyMelly 4 года назад +63

      I forgot how to do long division with actual numbers

    • @momo-cchi5978
      @momo-cchi5978 3 года назад +16

      I'd end up k*lling everyone in my class and then k*ll myself if that ever happened. 😣

  • @KnowingBetter
    @KnowingBetter 4 года назад +4153

    I finally know how they did math with Roman numerals!

  • @yassineszn17
    @yassineszn17 4 года назад +4097

    James bizonnette is history's matter sugar daddy

    • @AbdulGoodLooks
      @AbdulGoodLooks 4 года назад +183

      The legend himself

    • @pwnageshow2549
      @pwnageshow2549 4 года назад +107

      Lol james bizonnete got money 😂 i cant even afford to waste money on netflix. Yet this guy throw money left and right on youtube 😂

    • @YouuuuuuTosserrrr
      @YouuuuuuTosserrrr 4 года назад +46

      And Izzy?

    • @comradekenobi6908
      @comradekenobi6908 4 года назад +4

      I don't get it

    • @brodown64
      @brodown64 4 года назад +43

      @@comradekenobi6908 James is mostly the first donation named at the end of History Matters videos.

  • @bernardo1712
    @bernardo1712 3 года назад +63

    I’m a history major and I learn more in this channel than in class. Congrats!

    • @Watcher6868
      @Watcher6868 Год назад +2

      Drop out of your school unless you are there on a scholarship

  • @Alkerae
    @Alkerae 4 года назад +261

    2:28 "13 x 13 in Roman Numerals...
    ...
    Hence why we got rid of them."
    MIND BLOWN, WHAAAAAAAT

  • @NotOneOfUs
    @NotOneOfUs 4 года назад +223

    "Hence why we got rid of them."
    That was one of the shortest and best explanations for anything ever. Beats the hell out of school in my days.

  •  4 года назад +1255

    Welcome to the comment section or:I love James Bissonete and I hope he would marry my daughter.

  • @RealPeasantLord
    @RealPeasantLord 2 года назад +15

    Fun fact, the only numbers you can have in the denominator of a fraction where the resulting decimal doesn’t repeat infinitely are any multiples of the prime factors of your number systems base. So for base 10, the only fractions that won’t infinitely repeat as decimals are 1/(2^x*5^y), since the prime factors of 10 are 2 and 5

    • @Ptaku93
      @Ptaku93 Год назад +1

      These are words

    • @RealPeasantLord
      @RealPeasantLord Год назад +1

      @@Ptaku93 Indeed

    • @hiphopesq
      @hiphopesq Год назад +1

      "system's" base...and now I've contributed something.

  • @ricardoguanipa8275
    @ricardoguanipa8275 4 года назад +368

    Meanwhile in the Inca Empire:
    "Hey, how much for that lama?"
    "At least a 2 handfuls of Rope"

  • @moblinmajorgeneral
    @moblinmajorgeneral 4 года назад +2395

    I can't even begin to think how modern mathematics would've even come close to fruition without Arabic Numerals.

    • @IamJustaSimpleMan
      @IamJustaSimpleMan 4 года назад +257

      @@allan7380 and French fries are from Belgium. Good luck to convince people to call them Belgian fries 😊☺
      Some names historically developed, and association and actual source are 2 very different things.

    • @alejandroojeda1572
      @alejandroojeda1572 4 года назад +49

      Horribly. However I think we would eventually end Up with a a very similar number system.

    • @alilabeebalkoka
      @alilabeebalkoka 4 года назад +35

      @@allan7380 the United States thinks everyone should take up the imperial systems instead!
      Unfortunately it is more likely for the rest of the world to change over to the imperial systems before the United States of America switching over.

    • @aakashdutta7921
      @aakashdutta7921 4 года назад +72

      It's The Hindu(Indo) number system.

    • @syrialak101
      @syrialak101 4 года назад +18

      @@IamJustaSimpleMan Aren't French fries called French fries because they were made by a method of cooking then known as "French frying," now called deep frying?

  • @bigrustle6851
    @bigrustle6851 4 года назад +599

    Came for Arabic Numerals, stayed for James Bisonette.
    Edit: Yes I know it's one of those comments. I did enjoy the video, they never fail to either surprise me or make me laugh. Top notch.

    • @PANZERFAUST90
      @PANZERFAUST90 4 года назад

      He's not the only supporter you know...

    • @haris000000
      @haris000000 4 года назад +23

      @@PANZERFAUST90 of course who can forget spinning three plates XD

    • @Peterlovesgarage
      @Peterlovesgarage 4 года назад +3

      The Patron / Patreon supporter read out should always end with “Iz-ie / pronounced... Is-he?” (apologies as I haven’t checked the spelling) ... that’s pretty much all I listen out for. Izzy / Ishe is the perfect ending. Please make amends, and go back to this very best of temporary, just made up, yet well established traditions.

    • @sealboi2464
      @sealboi2464 4 года назад

      Dude this is the funniest shit I’ve read all day

    • @amritbarn26
      @amritbarn26 4 года назад

      IZZY?

  • @RamtinHG
    @RamtinHG Год назад +7

    Actually khawrazmi Iranian scientist redesigned those hindu numbers and from latin translation of his book these numbers spread in west .
    The numeral system came to be known to both the Persian mathematician Khwarizmi, who wrote a book, On the Calculation with Hindu Numerals in about 825, 830. Persian scientist Kushyar Gilani who wrote Kitab fi usul hisab al-hind (Principles of Hindu Reckoning) is one of the oldest surviving manuscripts using the Hindu numerals.[1

  • @paulnash6944
    @paulnash6944 4 года назад +473

    I still remember when I joked with a cashier at my college that I’ve used Arabic numerals my whole life, but still confuse them, and she was impressed that I knew Arabic numerals because she didn’t know it was the 0-9 symbols we all know and love. I laugh about that moment to this day.

    • @comradekenobi6908
      @comradekenobi6908 4 года назад +47

      Most people are like you, they don't realize it, although it's also kinda originated from India, then the Arabs develop it more

    • @BoxStudioExecutive
      @BoxStudioExecutive 4 года назад +10

      If you ever looked at what Arabic numerals actually looked like, it’s safe to say you’ve never used them.

    • @indefiniteabyss1257
      @indefiniteabyss1257 4 года назад +7

      They would probably laugh at you for becoming this ignorant. Those numbers are indian not arab

    • @paulnash6944
      @paulnash6944 4 года назад

      Boratstromm's Mongoose Ah, that makes sense.

    • @paulnash6944
      @paulnash6944 4 года назад

      indefinite abyss Hey, I didn’t know!

  • @runneruwu
    @runneruwu 3 года назад +1269

    I wonder if there's a number system that has yet to be invented that would make Rocket Science easy for toddlers

    • @JK03011997
      @JK03011997 3 года назад +357

      while this is clearly a meme, let me try to give an overly serious answer:
      our number system is nice in that it makes arithmetic of large numbers into something you can break up into smaller ones. Like splitting up addition and multiplication by digits. The trick being that the way we write down numbers tells us what it's remainders for division by powers of 10 are. So in effect we just learn all the stuff up tp 10 by heart and then the notation tells us how a number is split up into 10s. This works really great for stuff like that, but operations like exponentiation gets very tedious. Like 13+13 is easy, 13*13 takes a couple seconds, but 13^13? Hard. Log_8(13)? No clue.
      One thing that can do better on those operations would be a notation that would tell you what the log (or even repeated logs) of a number is. Then 13*13 becomes as easy as addition is for us since log(13*13)=log(13)+log(13) and even better 13^13 would be easy as log(13^13)=13*log(13) which you could simplify just like the 13*13 example.
      Does such a number system exist? Well the closest thing in terms of written stuff I can think of would be the scientific notation. If you learn the log_10 of the integers from 1-10 (the way we currently learn stuff like 3+5=8) then then you can pretty easily see the log of a number when written like that. 500 would be written 5*10^2 if you know that log_10(5) is about 0.7 then you can immediately see that log_10(500) is about 2.7 telling you that the log(500^500)~1350 which means 500^500 is about 10^1350. Not super accurate (we're off by a factor of 3) but doing the calculation the decimal way would be very very tedious.
      Downside - addition isn't as easy. In the extreme case (just writing down the log of a number) addition becomes exactly as tedious as exponentiation is for arabic numerals.
      THE REAL DEAL:
      There is a real and actually useful implementation of logarithmic number representation though that was very popular last century and widely used. Depending on how old you are you, or your parents, might have learned how to use it in school. Slide rules. What the abacus (in one way of using it) is for arabic numberals te slide rule is for logarithmic numbers. A number is represented by a position of a slider (which is nicely marked with the arabic number, so you don't need to remember yourself) and magically even crazy difficult operations like 9.81*350*Log(890/757) or (6*10^11 * 6*10^24 / 6400)^0.5 become a trivial matter of sliding a plastic marker back and forth a couple of times. These incidentally are the calculations for the maximum speed an 890t fueled/757t empty spacecraft with an isp of 350s can achieve and the velocity required to escape the earths gravity - as you can see these are almost entirely exponentiation, multiplication and logs. Exactly the stuff a logarithmic number system works great for.
      It is no wonder you can see a lot of slide rules in footage taken at 60s nasa.

    • @AdamBechtol
      @AdamBechtol 3 года назад +4

      mmmmmm

    • @laszlofekete9245
      @laszlofekete9245 3 года назад +32

      @@JK03011997 Exactly what I wanted to say!

    • @gmoroder
      @gmoroder 3 года назад +24

      @@JK03011997 beautiful explanation, thanks!

    • @m.m.1301
      @m.m.1301 3 года назад +33

      @@JK03011997 I didn't understand a word of what you said, but it seems reliable so you're getting my like

  • @blazingphantom2813
    @blazingphantom2813 4 года назад +441

    I got XCIX problems but counting is definitely one

  • @rosiefay7283
    @rosiefay7283 3 года назад +11

    2:42 It's even harder than that, because even addition is tricky because there's much more carrying. In your example, III+II+IV becomes IX, and it's only a matter of luck that CLX didn't need any more carrying.

  • @prakharsinha4971
    @prakharsinha4971 4 года назад +708

    RUclips: hey wanna watch why we use Arabic Numericals over roman ?
    Me who has never passed maths exam at 3 AM : *Intersting*

    • @oliverlacota3112
      @oliverlacota3112 4 года назад +81

      Stop taking them at 3 AM, then.

    • @meneither3834
      @meneither3834 4 года назад +11

      I've done math on college and also never took exam at 3 am.

    • @JonatasAdoM
      @JonatasAdoM 4 года назад +8

      I love that the comment has a double meaning.
      Maybe it has something to do with how brain's aversion to math.
      Please don't edit it.

    • @radjadawamindra697
      @radjadawamindra697 4 года назад

      Omoshiroi

    • @festethephule7553
      @festethephule7553 4 года назад +2

      And here we see an example of the importance of proper puncuation.

  • @ericjamieson
    @ericjamieson 4 года назад +370

    The most interesting part of the video was seeing how multiplication with Roman numerals worked.

    • @rosiefay7283
      @rosiefay7283 3 года назад +12

      Yes. I've heard this method called the Russian peasants' method (or similar names). I didn't know Romans used it too. I'd like to point out that halving say LVI (getting XXVIII) is not trivial.

    • @meberg500
      @meberg500 2 года назад +3

      @@rosiefay7283 I'm still not over the part where 13/2=6

    • @auzakov1977
      @auzakov1977 2 года назад

      @@meberg500 idk if Roman numerals had a decimal back then, rounded up it'd be 6

    • @entcraft44
      @entcraft44 Год назад +2

      This algorithm has the advantage of not requiring the memorization of multiplication tables. You only ever halve or double numbers. You don't need to know what e.g. 8*7 or 6*4 are. Hence why it is called peasants' multiplication. But it was used long before that, probably invented by the ancient Egyptians.

    • @entcraft44
      @entcraft44 Год назад

      @@meberg500 You always round down / discard the remainder.

  • @Henu_K
    @Henu_K 4 года назад +45

    2:14 I love that meadow prancing scene every time

  • @Hinoema01
    @Hinoema01 2 года назад +24

    Love these! You should do a follow up video on the Church's long resistance to the concept of zero which really delayed the adoption of Arabic numerals.

    • @deepaklegaldeepak
      @deepaklegaldeepak Год назад

      Arabic numerals are nothing but Hindu numerals.

    • @adog3129
      @adog3129 Год назад

      sorry, the numbers are letters because god says zero is made up

    • @falconeshield
      @falconeshield Год назад +1

      Why is it always the Christians

  • @TheBanzaiCharge
    @TheBanzaiCharge 4 года назад +146

    Imagine the "show your work" area in math if we still used roman numerals

  • @hossdelgado2
    @hossdelgado2 4 года назад +434

    welp I just learned that the Cyrillic numeral system existed.

    • @davidgreen5994
      @davidgreen5994 3 года назад +38

      Yeah, and somehow looks like is even worse than the roman numeral system.

    • @ahbabmuttaki1856
      @ahbabmuttaki1856 3 года назад +1

      Same

    • @Sascha969
      @Sascha969 3 года назад +8

      Nice stuff for encrypted messages

    • @SKa-tt9nm
      @SKa-tt9nm 3 года назад +16

      Shoutout Bulgarian empire

    • @carlknaack1019
      @carlknaack1019 3 года назад +8

      Yeah, it looks kind of like the Greek or Hebrew numeral system. Roman numerals are so much easier than those, it is the same difference as between Arabic and Roman.

  • @Facio_
    @Facio_ 4 года назад +185

    actually, people didn’t do maths with roman numerals, if you needed to add something, you needed the help of someone who knew how to use an abacus properly. that’s why fibonacci wrote “liber abaci” (the book of the abacus), in which he was against them.

    • @philip8498
      @philip8498 3 года назад +10

      arabic numerals are still superior. multiplying with an abacus is a pain i imagine

    • @PastPresented
      @PastPresented 3 года назад +9

      @@philip8498 Multiplying with an abacus involves a little cheating: you need to memorise the multiplication tables up to 9x9!

    • @ahbabmuttaki1856
      @ahbabmuttaki1856 3 года назад +6

      @@philip8498 I used to be an abacus learner and yeah...you need courses from the start to even think about how to do it.

    • @ahbabmuttaki1856
      @ahbabmuttaki1856 3 года назад

      @@PastPresented yeah...I was first surprised when out teacher told us that.

    • @parthbonde2106
      @parthbonde2106 3 года назад +2

      @@PastPresented So does normal multiplication?

  • @bloqk16
    @bloqk16 Год назад +6

    I recall back in grade school when my teacher decided to have fun with her students with assigning a multiplication arithmetic test with using Roman numerals. We were good for the first two equations calculations; but then when the later calculations required a zero, most of us youngsters got stumped.

  • @s-ritchi3402
    @s-ritchi3402 4 года назад +269

    Last time I was this early James Bisonnette was only a legend

    • @biliminsrlar5752
      @biliminsrlar5752 4 года назад +8

      He is a living legend.

    • @PANZERFAUST90
      @PANZERFAUST90 4 года назад +1

      You spelled his name wrong and he's not the only supporter...

    • @nestyie3835
      @nestyie3835 4 года назад +7

      @@PANZERFAUST90 you don't have to keep commenting on every James Bizonnette related comment

    • @TechSupport900
      @TechSupport900 4 года назад +2

      It’s bizonnette

    • @jimtaylor294
      @jimtaylor294 4 года назад

      Ah; a man of Bizonette culture I see.

  • @sail2byzantium
    @sail2byzantium 4 года назад +42

    A wonderful video that fulfills Horace's dictum of both delighting and instructing. The Roman numeral math lesson with the concluding "and there's your answer--hence why we got rid of them" was laugh-out-loud funny (and it was neat to see how you could actually multiply Roman numerals). A deserved thumbs up! Love this channel!

  • @_vla
    @_vla 4 года назад +344

    "Bye" said the roman numerals
    "Heyyyyyy" said the arabic numbers

    • @crankthetank3581
      @crankthetank3581 4 года назад +16

      History of the entire world, i guess refrence aye?

    • @rohatb
      @rohatb 4 года назад +19

      Eating the entire Mediterranean for breakfast.

    • @lehistoryconnoisseur1441
      @lehistoryconnoisseur1441 4 года назад +11

      Rohat Berken Çelik
      Thanks for invading our homeland

    • @rohatb
      @rohatb 4 года назад +17

      Said the Jews, getting tired of people invading their homeland

    • @biliminsrlar5752
      @biliminsrlar5752 4 года назад +11

      @@rohatb "hi. everything's great" said some guy who seems to be getting very popular

  • @MarkAhrens-HeritageFilms
    @MarkAhrens-HeritageFilms 2 года назад +1

    Fantastically Fast! Keep it up!!

  • @randomdude9135
    @randomdude9135 4 года назад +116

    That "oink oink" at the end always gets me 😂

    • @rianqi
      @rianqi 4 года назад +6

      Mine is "A man with culture"...

    • @jimtaylor294
      @jimtaylor294 4 года назад +3

      Mine is "Izzy?"

    • @k0mentator507
      @k0mentator507 4 года назад +3

      Jim Taylor "spinning 3 plates"

    • @ShubhamMishrabro
      @ShubhamMishrabro 4 года назад

      @@rianqi 🙏😂😂🤣 i hope all have funny names like you guys

  • @awildfilingcabinet6239
    @awildfilingcabinet6239 4 года назад +269

    History matters: "I'm going to get yelled at for calling them Arabic aren't I?"
    The entire comment section: "James Bizonnette"

  • @BossVolt
    @BossVolt 4 года назад +240

    0:34 Still cracks me up to this day 🤣🤣🤣

    • @diyaroy5059
      @diyaroy5059 3 года назад +4

      😂😂😂

    • @Campeon99
      @Campeon99 3 года назад +14

      XIV plus xvixvxvxv = luh

    • @Campeon99
      @Campeon99 3 года назад +5

      Obviously 🙄

  • @tenhirankei
    @tenhirankei 3 года назад +6

    There's also the part about the Arabic numerals including the zero that made the decimal system easier to understand and convey.

  • @T33K3SS3LCH3N
    @T33K3SS3LCH3N 4 года назад +56

    It took Japan until the 19th century to adopt them, but nowadays they are also common in everyday writing.
    They already used a decimal system adopted from China, which feels like it's somewhere between Arabic and Roman numerals. Even nowadays its quite intuitive to use since it got all ten decimal digits 0-9, it's just that powers of ten like 10 and 100 have their own characters so you write "ten-three" rather than "one-three" to say "thirteen". Meaning it was pretty easy to adapt for them.
    They still use their old numeral system as well in many places. No need to sweat about maybe 20 more characters if you already need to know like 3000.

    • @b4ttlemast0r
      @b4ttlemast0r Год назад +1

      The traditional Japanese / Chinese system is basically just writing it exactly as pronounced. Keep in mind that they don't have irregular numbers like eleven, twelve, the -teens and -ty's, instead they say ten-five for fifteen, two-ten for twenty etc, just like we say three-hundred or four-thousand. So instead of writing, for example, four-two-zero, they would write four-hundred-two-ten. And in fact, a system commonly used is actually combining Arabic and Chinese numerals. Whereas English spoken numerals are based on multiples of thousand, like thousand, million, billion, trillion etc, the Japanes numerals work in the same way but based on multiples of ten thousand: 万 man (ten thousand), 億 oku (100 million), 兆 chou (1 trillion) etc. Commonly, these are written with Chinese characters, while the rest of the number is written in Arabic numerals, so for example 420 million is 4億2000万. You may even see something like 3.4万, meaning 34000, similar to how RUclips uses 3.4K or 3.4M in English.

    • @KaotikBOOO
      @KaotikBOOO Год назад

      ​​@@b4ttlemast0r??? There's a lot of irregular numerals in Japanese
      You even have to play with 2 sets of numbers while jumping from one another
      They're only kinda regular when removing all context (when you're not talking about quantities/counting anything/...) and even then there's usually a jump from Chinese to Japanese numerals for 4 and 7 in some cases and not others

    • @Alakazam001
      @Alakazam001 10 месяцев назад +1

      All these things like number system/ decimal system/ buddhism /algebra trignometry/ Chess etc originated in India during the GUPTA empire.
      Known as golden age of India.

  • @FriendlyMarmot
    @FriendlyMarmot 4 года назад +144

    2:28 Amazing! I saw this and was like "WTF, how does this even work", and then when trying it for myself with 32 in the left column, all of the sudden, it hit me: Dividing the left column in half until you get to 1 while doubling the other side basically means you are forcing the product of the 2 factors to be expressed by counting in binary!! I noticed it because cutting 32 in half gave me 16, 8, 4, 2, 1, which are all digit values used in binary. The number of times you can halve the left-side number gives you the number of binary digits you'll be adding together, and crossing out the even ones is like marking the digit "0" or "off". Then you add all the "1" or "on" bits together and get your number. You can kind of "binarize" any number in the left-hand though. That doesn't explain every tiny detail of it, but it gives me a pretty good idea of the basic mechanism and what's going on. :)

    • @FriendlyMarmot
      @FriendlyMarmot 4 года назад +17

      So now does that mean that the Romans invented the binary numerical system when they learned to multiply?

    • @michaelbayer5094
      @michaelbayer5094 3 года назад +2

      You proved the multiplication method using Arabic numerals, but how did the concept originate?

    • @FriendlyMarmot
      @FriendlyMarmot 3 года назад +1

      @@michaelbayer5094 That's a great question! I wish I knew! Fascinating topic for another video by someone, if they can find out. :)

    • @michaelbayer5094
      @michaelbayer5094 3 года назад +2

      @@FriendlyMarmot I'm not a Math person at all. Way over my head, but I'd love to see it explained and that history too.

    • @jamesgulapa7219
      @jamesgulapa7219 3 года назад +18

      Thanks for the explanation...
      my nose is now bleeding...

  • @BradyPostma
    @BradyPostma 4 года назад +46

    2:30 - As a math nerd, I loved learning this archaic technique!

    • @ThexXxXxOLOxXxXx
      @ThexXxXxOLOxXxXx 3 года назад

      Careful not to delve into the deeper occult with that knowledge

    • @BradyPostma
      @BradyPostma 3 года назад +1

      I already know how to use a slide rule, how to calculate square roots with a paper and pen, and I'm reading Eculid's _The Elements of Geometery._ How more occult does mathematical anachronism get?

    • @ThexXxXxOLOxXxXx
      @ThexXxXxOLOxXxXx 3 года назад

      @@BradyPostma What are you saying? are you casting a spell on me? the foreman shall hear of this and light you up on fire

    • @BradyPostma
      @BradyPostma 3 года назад

      @@ThexXxXxOLOxXxXx Chop them up, mash them, stick 'em in a stew.

  • @fletchadox1421
    @fletchadox1421 2 года назад +1

    Well done. This is really informative.

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 4 года назад +496

    India? Didn’t know that was the origin. And they’ve got *spices*

    • @NotAmira_
      @NotAmira_ 4 года назад +22

      Thanks Kim for making the hamburger

    • @KitchenSinkSoup
      @KitchenSinkSoup 4 года назад +6

      You still alive mate?

    • @yogi_gs
      @yogi_gs 4 года назад +7

      The real question wich part of india because with only said it from india will invite many coment from indian espesialy the hatefull one

    • @tanmaysrivastav
      @tanmaysrivastav 4 года назад +42

      It is called Hindu-Arabic System. People just miss out the Hindu part which would make i much clear.

    • @MrRemicas
      @MrRemicas 4 года назад +6

      The spices must flow!

  • @jonas1015119
    @jonas1015119 4 года назад +66

    Today I learned how multiplication with roman numerals worked. Jesus Christ.

  • @rockstar450
    @rockstar450 4 года назад +10

    I watch your videos multiple times and each time I uncover subtle jokes. You clearly put hours into seconds of content. Thank you!

  • @rayoflight62
    @rayoflight62 2 года назад +25

    Thanks for the video.
    One fact about Roman numerals, worth of note, is about the number 4.
    You may know that the correct way to write down the number 4, is IV.
    But if you look at any clock face, you will find the writing IIII for the number 4.
    When written alone, the 4 is noted as IIII.
    That's why the Romans went to great lengths to avoid upsetting the father of all Gods, IVPITER.
    A stand alone 4 uses the same writing as the initials of the name IVPITER; and that would have attracted unnecessarily the attention of the capricious boss of all Gods.
    Therefore, the Romans avoided any occasion for even the slighter misunderstanding, so a standalone number 4 was written as IIII instead of IV.
    We can't say, even today, if the different notation for the number 4 was because of their extreme respect, or because of superstition...

    • @jongreen9171
      @jongreen9171 2 года назад +3

      Really? My kitchen clock had IIII rather than IV and I have always thought this was an error. Thanks for the enlightenment.

    • @entcraft44
      @entcraft44 Год назад

      I had once heard that the "IIII" on clock faces is used to make them seem more "balanced" because the numerals on the left side have more strokes. Interesting to see that there is an older explanation!

  • @judecaruso434
    @judecaruso434 4 года назад +74

    Last time I was this early there was one Rome

    • @theotakuking4136
      @theotakuking4136 4 года назад +7

      In my heart the Roman Imperium lives on

    • @miguelpadeiro762
      @miguelpadeiro762 4 года назад

      There still is, went there before covid, pretty beautiful...tons of Senegalese trying to sell you bracelets, but you still got all the wonders of the city and that one statue of Julius Caeser filled with pigeon shit

  • @Doogie2K3
    @Doogie2K3 4 года назад +896

    "I'm gonna get yelled at for calling them Arabic numerals, aren't I?"
    I mean, you *did* clarify that the Arabs adopted them from India, right off the hop. Not much more to be done than that without confusing people.

    • @xenobladesrg7729
      @xenobladesrg7729 4 года назад +7

      This is what it look in Indian numeral

    • @vanshkejriwal4823
      @vanshkejriwal4823 4 года назад +8

      @Fady Al qaisy bro I know the Hindu numbers and no we don't write it like 5141 or some sh*t.

    • @mg1721
      @mg1721 4 года назад +74

      @Fady Al qaisy
      0-0, 1-१, 2-२,3-३, 4-४, 5-५, 6-६, 7-७, 8-८, 9-९, 10-१०
      This is how we write the hindu numerals, the number 2,3,6,9,10 look similar. But the appearance of the numeral do not matter.
      Also we don't write 51 as 11 34 21, we write it as ५१. So please kindly stop pulling statements out of your ass and presenting them as facts. The Hindus made contributions to the study of trigonometry, algebra, arithmetic, calculus and negative numbers among other things, do you think that would have been possible with the hindu system you are talking about?

    • @Ashishsingh-no6hm
      @Ashishsingh-no6hm 3 года назад +32

      @Fady Al qaisy 😂😂😂mad or what ??? Hindu number are highly identical to hindu arabic numbers..There is a slight difference between hindu numbers and hindu-arabic numbers

    • @ahbabmuttaki1856
      @ahbabmuttaki1856 3 года назад +5

      I hardly believe that those weren't taken from India.Since arabs were already advanced before the roman "empire".But that's just my theory

  • @merrittanimation7721
    @merrittanimation7721 4 года назад +121

    Arab World: "7"
    Europe: "D:"

    • @realhawaii5o
      @realhawaii5o 4 года назад +16

      ? D is 500

    • @dr.weedington2305
      @dr.weedington2305 4 года назад +7

      @@realhawaii5o that's supposed to be a face I think

    • @sowhat249
      @sowhat249 4 года назад +3

      @@raygiovanno8657 | *surprised Pikachu face

    • @ArkadiBolschek
      @ArkadiBolschek 4 года назад

      More like "O:" actually

    • @muntadar1655
      @muntadar1655 4 года назад

      @@realhawaii5o bruh it's a text emoji

  • @ram0166
    @ram0166 2 года назад +20

    When I was taught about the history of our numerical system in school they were called Hindu-Arabic numeral system. When I started seeing people refer to Arabic numbers on social media I wasn’t sure what they were talking about at first.

    • @maas1208
      @maas1208 2 года назад +2

      This numeral system was actually created by Indian Muslims

    • @ram0166
      @ram0166 2 года назад

      @@maas1208 let me guess, Muslims discovered America and invented computers too

    • @maas1208
      @maas1208 2 года назад +1

      @@ram0166 yes

    • @genz8606
      @genz8606 Год назад

      Indian muslims didn't created it... But were created by hindus...go and learn correct history

    • @AJAYSINGH-ns1vv
      @AJAYSINGH-ns1vv Год назад +13

      ​@@maas1208 what are you dreaming. They're invented by brahmins of India.

  • @pillarnexustheancientgladiator
    @pillarnexustheancientgladiator 4 года назад +18

    It's one of those inventions we use a lot that makes things so much easier, yet hardly anyone talks about it because we've gotten to used to it for so long.

  • @epstein2711
    @epstein2711 4 года назад +15

    Interesting as always

  • @scholaroftheworldalternatehist
    @scholaroftheworldalternatehist 4 года назад +6

    I loved History Matters so much that I decided to create a similar themed alternate-history channel! Thanks for the inspiration!

  • @hereLiesThisTroper
    @hereLiesThisTroper Год назад +3

    The face of that guy at seeing the number 7 is priceless!

  • @byzantineboi8345
    @byzantineboi8345 4 года назад +793

    ROME GOOD
    everything else bad
    Oh Justinian’s dream could never be realized

    • @Daniel-yc2ur
      @Daniel-yc2ur 4 года назад +27

      Byzantine Boi I wonder would of happened if the Greek and Roman golden age lasted forever

    • @markhenley3097
      @markhenley3097 4 года назад +22

      @@Daniel-yc2ur No Islam.

    • @CoffeeSnep
      @CoffeeSnep 4 года назад +17

      @@Daniel-yc2ur there was a Star Trek episode about that. They had legionarres wearing Lorica segmentata but wielding submachine guns and hosting reality TV. It was pretty good

    • @comradekenobi6908
      @comradekenobi6908 4 года назад +4

      @@markhenley3097 no colonialism?

    • @biliminsrlar5752
      @biliminsrlar5752 4 года назад +7

      @@comradekenobi6908 and no communism.

  • @forwardslash1486
    @forwardslash1486 4 года назад +298

    I remember joining a right wing english group on facebook and posting that the uk government are looking to implement arabic numbers into it's education system. The rage that followed was very entertaining.

    • @AJ-ho1jv
      @AJ-ho1jv 3 года назад +23

      Lamo I bet that was fun

    • @joncarlosmjs4502
      @joncarlosmjs4502 3 года назад +2

      😂😂😂😂

    • @yusufn7467
      @yusufn7467 3 года назад +2

      😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @Dorgpoop
      @Dorgpoop 3 года назад +5

      that's class mate 😂

    • @Dorgpoop
      @Dorgpoop 3 года назад +7

      @@sceafa8370 cope

  • @redvorno
    @redvorno 4 года назад +352

    Litteraly everyone: James Bissonet
    Nobody: Izzy?

  • @williampaine3520
    @williampaine3520 4 месяца назад

    That multiplication method is actually amazing. It took me a minute to understand why it works, but now I understand it I think I'm going to start using it for mental maths. I think it could be faster than the grid method. There is less to remember, and sums are either addition or multiplying by 2.

  • @unconqueredsun6903
    @unconqueredsun6903 4 года назад +21

    I just love that "And hence why we got rid of them".

  • @al-dimashqi
    @al-dimashqi 4 года назад +246

    While the Arabs use the Indian numerals

    • @AchiragChiragg
      @AchiragChiragg 4 года назад +58

      @@islamisthetruth3402 lol what?

    • @fungaiinthecar2233
      @fungaiinthecar2233 4 года назад +14

      @@islamisthetruth3402 Humans like to make life weird and hard

    • @al-dimashqi
      @al-dimashqi 4 года назад +17

      @@neemapaxima6116 perhaps these numbers are used in Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan, but in the Arab countries it's: ٠ ١ ٢ ٣ ٤ ٥ ٦ ٧ ٨ ٩ ١٠

    • @neemapaxima6116
      @neemapaxima6116 4 года назад +3

      @@al-dimashqiCorrect, ۴، ۵ and ۶ are different

    • @comradekenobi6908
      @comradekenobi6908 4 года назад +2

      They developed it, just search it

  • @rpepperuk
    @rpepperuk 3 года назад +7

    That is one of the most interesting things I’ve learnt in a long time… you rock ☺️

  • @dejomonylemon956
    @dejomonylemon956 Год назад +3

    @0:51 how he just stares on disbelief at the number 7 🤣

  • @adjam1991
    @adjam1991 4 года назад +61

    I've made it my latest goal to perfect multiplying Roman numerals. Never know when it'll be useful.

    • @Rine910
      @Rine910 4 года назад +4

      How is your progress?

    • @SYMQ8
      @SYMQ8 3 года назад +1

      Yoo have perfected it?

    • @SilverReviews
      @SilverReviews 3 года назад +1

      It will never be useful lol

    • @hassanabdulahi4705
      @hassanabdulahi4705 3 года назад +1

      I guess you didn’t learn it because it’ll never be useful unless you have a time machine.

    • @barleyeducated8714
      @barleyeducated8714 3 года назад +4

      Easy, peasy,
      Step 1. translate the numbers into arabic.
      Step 2. do the math
      Step 3. translate back to roman. :P

  • @the_changerang
    @the_changerang 4 года назад +8

    "Leaving only monarchs and the occasional calendar using them"
    And musicians, we still use them too. A chord with the first note, third note, and fifth note in a scale is sometimes seen as a basic I-III-V chord

  • @julianivanov3058
    @julianivanov3058 3 года назад +10

    Wow someone finally mentioned the cyrillic numerals.
    I love you guys

  • @oliversherman2414
    @oliversherman2414 2 года назад

    I love your channel keep up the great stuff!!!

  • @raeconteur
    @raeconteur 4 года назад +10

    Fun fact, the arabs actually still call them Indian numerals, and most indians have no idea they invented the decimal system. it came from eastern india to be precise, where Buddha started his career.

    • @blacksheep6174
      @blacksheep6174 3 года назад +1

      Bihari 😂 that poorest region in india

    • @knowledgedesk1653
      @knowledgedesk1653 3 года назад

      @@blacksheep6174 Yes?

    • @vladof_putler
      @vladof_putler 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@blacksheep6174
      Bihar was different back then

    • @vladof_putler
      @vladof_putler 11 месяцев назад

      Yup but Buddhism has nothing to do with it

  • @monikhadka
    @monikhadka 4 года назад +156

    Romans: The whole world will use Roman numerals
    Arab world: hold my decimals

    • @Leela_ya_Maaya
      @Leela_ya_Maaya 4 года назад +18

      Cow gives milk, but small child thinks milkman give !
      Arab are milkman and Sanskrit is a cow.

    • @reinatr4848
      @reinatr4848 4 года назад +2

      They brought it to Europe tho @everyone

    • @vj9086
      @vj9086 4 года назад +4

      Arabs developed it by far
      Indian numbers not similar to today's numbers, also they have other ways to writh 11, 12, 13, milion etc..

    • @vj9086
      @vj9086 4 года назад +4

      @Qalidurut
      This zero ٠ is Indo- Arabic zero
      ١٢٣٤٥٦٧٨٩٠
      Today the world uses Arabic numerals 123..., and some Arabs and Persians uses Indo-Arabic numbers.
      They originally created in middle East and Egypt, transmitted to India developed there, tgen Arabs and Persians developed them farther to what we use today

    • @vj9086
      @vj9086 4 года назад +3

      @p w
      they are still different, indian numbers used a different way to represent some numbers, its more complicated, if u speak Hindi u can know it by ur self, 11 12 13 21 22 those numbers are not simple as we use today
      This has nothing to do with evolution, it called development, and yes indians developed the Egyptian- Sumerian numbers, no one can say otherwise

  • @levinb1
    @levinb1 4 года назад +170

    You forgot to mention Algebra, Jabr Al Jabr, and how that superior math system can *only* work with Arabic Numerals and especially with the very special and non-intuitive number “0”. (The 0 number is what came from India/Pakistan specially, btw. :).

    • @levinb1
      @levinb1 4 года назад +18

      Though I am not sure if it was the Abbasid Mathematics that standardized the base-10 system we still use, or some other group from India/Pakistan.

    • @haiderbutt2454
      @haiderbutt2454 4 года назад +63

      @pulkit khanduri thats stupid, if their ancestors were hindu they can claim it as their heritage as india and pakistan never existed then, this is akin to saying hindus cannot claim mughal empire as their heritage or iranians cannot claim the sassanians as their heritage.

    • @alexanderwinter9171
      @alexanderwinter9171 4 года назад

      No we would just have used Greek letters

    • @alexanderwinter9171
      @alexanderwinter9171 4 года назад +1

      We would have used Greek letters

    • @abhishekrai1060
      @abhishekrai1060 4 года назад +18

      Aryabhatta was from today's India who invented 0 not Pakistan.

  • @lawrence-k7v
    @lawrence-k7v 2 года назад

    Thanks for that. I will be able to sleep tonight, you have answered a question that has vexed me for years.

  • @pika87
    @pika87 4 года назад +5

    0:20 is quite misleading :) the map shows the Bulgarian Empire which lasted from 893-1018, Peter the Great reigned between 1672-1725, and the statement is that much of Eastern Europe used the Roman numerals - which is true only the map shows the Balkans (and parts of the Carpathian Basin) rather than the Eastern Europe that truly used the Roman numerals until then (which was mainly the Kievan Rus, later Russia). For example the Hungarian Kingdom used Arabic numerals since the middle of the 15th century.
    Anyways, good vid, thanks. :)

  • @joshuasims5421
    @joshuasims5421 4 года назад +6

    The multiplication algorithm at 2:40 is just binary multiplication; dividing the first number and counting the odds decomposes the first number into binary (in the case of 13, 1101). The doubled multiples of the second number are just the number in binary with extra 0's on the end (1101, 11010, 110100, 1101000.) Though this algorithm was developed by the egyptians, it resembles the same algorithm used by computers to multiply. They may not have been writing out their numbers in binary, but this system of halving and doubling works because it implicitly invokes binary math.

    • @joshuasims5421
      @joshuasims5421 4 года назад +1

      13*13 = b1101*b1101
      1101 (13)
      *1101 (13)
      =
      1101 (13)+
      110100 (52)+
      1101000 (104)
      =
      10101001 (169).
      The same numbers are summed as in the roman numeral example. 26 is not added, because in binary, the 2nd from the right digit is 0, just as the 2nd from the top row has an even in the left column.

  • @kinginexile7139
    @kinginexile7139 4 года назад +152

    Mad respect for mentioning the Bulgarian Empire ❤

    • @jgdooley2003
      @jgdooley2003 4 года назад +7

      Cyril and Methodius were saints who spread the faith to the slavic world from Greece. The Bulgarians then passed the faith and the alphabet (Cyrillic) to the Eastern Slavs and Serbians and Montenegoans etc.

    • @jea1337
      @jea1337 3 года назад

      dog empire

    • @rawka_7929
      @rawka_7929 3 года назад +7

      @@jgdooley2003 Slavs from Byzantium but it wasn't them that made the alphabet it was their Bulgarian students that took the Glagolitic alphabet that Cyril and Methodius made and decided it was too complicated so they made the Cyrillic

    • @diyaroy5059
      @diyaroy5059 3 года назад

      @@jea1337 what

    • @jea1337
      @jea1337 3 года назад

      @@diyaroy5059 dog

  • @MCsCreations
    @MCsCreations 2 года назад

    Dude, I've just found your channel... Yesterday, I believe. And I already watched many videos!
    It's a really treasure! Take good care of it!

  • @chilarai1
    @chilarai1 4 года назад +57

    The West called a part of mathematics "algebra" from an Arab named Al Gibr who translated the work from Sanskrit. He says so in the book. The West borrowed "Damascus steel" from the Arabs who borrowed it from India. It's called Wootz steel.

    • @JavohirXR
      @JavohirXR 2 года назад +10

      Who told you that sht about algebra?
      Algebra was the western name for «Al-Jibr» short name of the book which was written by Al-Khwarizmi. It was not a translation, it was work of art. Try to at least google what you're saying before posting it.

    • @shivanshsingh7593
      @shivanshsingh7593 5 месяцев назад

      Search Beej ganit..
      What we call Algebra in India..
      It was developed way before Algebra..(which is actually a translation)

  • @hamd8375
    @hamd8375 4 года назад +195

    Because the roman ones were inconvient lmao

    • @comradekenobi6908
      @comradekenobi6908 4 года назад +33

      Facts,
      They're fancy tho

    • @eggy6745
      @eggy6745 4 года назад +19

      Roman numerals would have made maths 100 times more boring

    • @alexanderwinter9171
      @alexanderwinter9171 4 года назад +8

      @@eggy6745 and we would have to do algebra with Greek letters only

    • @theasianboy315
      @theasianboy315 4 года назад +8

      Imagine try to solve a logarithmic equation, or calculate potential energy scale with Roman numerals

    • @armija
      @armija 4 года назад +9

      @@eggy6745 not only boring, but pretty much impossible for anything over basic mathematics.

  • @nafrost2787
    @nafrost2787 4 года назад +26

    Just imagine how weird it would be to use imaginary and complex numbers with Roman Numerals.

  • @markjd4
    @markjd4 Год назад +4

    Don’t forget, Americans are better versed in Roman Numerals than many Europeans for one simple reason: the Super Bowl.

  • @kuolettavaVids
    @kuolettavaVids 4 года назад +14

    I would like to see more information describing the anti-forgering properties of Roman Numerals, as well as any additions made to Arabic ones or other methods to prevent forgery.

  • @reiniervanderhulst3375
    @reiniervanderhulst3375 4 года назад +80

    Wait: were there '2 main reasons' or 'II main reasons' it took a while before Arabic numbers took off?

  • @robertmcqueen289
    @robertmcqueen289 4 года назад +6

    If one remembers right. Romans used to place a line above the M, turning it from 1,000 to 1,000,000. Other letters had a similar update. They are still used today. Normally in television when stating what year the programme was recorded. For example MMXX (2020).

  • @filipmerksa1426
    @filipmerksa1426 2 года назад

    Brilliant. Love this channel so much

  • @roberttbrockway
    @roberttbrockway 4 года назад +38

    I tend to call them Hindu-Arabic to give recognition to their actual inventors. In any case Hindu-Arabic numerals as used in Arabic speaking countries are different from but related to, the ones used in Europe.

    • @partha1331
      @partha1331 3 года назад +10

      Its ironic that the numerals used by the arabs are called indian numerals by them

    • @trendshort_
      @trendshort_ Год назад +2

      ​@@partha1331It's also Ironic that Indian numbers are called Arabian numbers

    • @partha1331
      @partha1331 Год назад

      @@trendshort_ Only idiots call it that.

  • @nickjulius4260
    @nickjulius4260 4 года назад +8

    0:28 the answer is: MCMLXII (1962)

  • @YTM100
    @YTM100 4 года назад +466

    "why does the west use Arab numerals?"
    And why does the arab world use Indian numerals?

    • @nawafEalharbi
      @nawafEalharbi 4 года назад +21

      🤣🤣🤣 is very werd

    • @jakeblanton6853
      @jakeblanton6853 4 года назад +83

      And why was Mohammed a pedophile?

    • @comradekenobi6908
      @comradekenobi6908 4 года назад +208

      And why is there always a guy asking questions that has no connection to the original comment?

    • @zackyjack8891
      @zackyjack8891 4 года назад +4

      @Mark Book you wrecked he’s ass bro

    • @zackyjack8891
      @zackyjack8891 4 года назад +10

      @@jakeblanton6853 if you want me to wreck you harder

  • @vahidmirkhani
    @vahidmirkhani 2 года назад +16

    Can you PLEASE tell us how to do square roots in Roman numerals?🥺
    It must be easy.

  • @solinvictus1214
    @solinvictus1214 4 года назад +40

    Probably Fibonacci
    Edit: 1:05 knew it

    • @appleslover
      @appleslover 4 года назад +6

      @Knee Grow stolen wouldn't be a proper word to describe it, because they didn't claim anything and were busy translating until the sack of Baghdad in 1258 by the Mongols and the burning, destruction of the house of wisdom which I consider the second cruelest crime in human history after the burning of the library of Alexandria

    • @appleslover
      @appleslover 4 года назад +1

      @Knee Grow so by your logic the British and the French stole ancient Greeks' works, right?

  • @biliminsrlar5752
    @biliminsrlar5752 4 года назад +27

    Italy: *exists*
    Medicis: _It's free real estate._

  • @krishnachaitanya414
    @krishnachaitanya414 4 года назад +95

    The credit for ancient mathematics largely goes to India
    But rarely ever credit is given idk why

    • @vishalmuralidharan4515
      @vishalmuralidharan4515 4 года назад +46

      because everything is written in the eyes of the West, and since the Arabs introduced the number system to the West, they assumed it was "Arabic numerals"

    • @AggressiveArguments
      @AggressiveArguments 4 года назад +4

      @@vishalmuralidharan4515 *Assist Strike!*

    • @BALLARDTWIN
      @BALLARDTWIN 4 года назад +38

      @@vishalmuralidharan4515
      The arabs also developed this aswell
      Indians only came up with the concept
      It was heavily refined by arabs during the golden age

    • @PramurtoMukhopadhyay
      @PramurtoMukhopadhyay 4 года назад +38

      @@BALLARDTWIN no they didn't, we have been doing mathematics for 5000 years. A desert cult didn't come up with that.

    • @BALLARDTWIN
      @BALLARDTWIN 4 года назад +41

      @@PramurtoMukhopadhyay erm I hate to break it to you mate but that "desert cult"far surpassed the mathematics of ancient india
      Arabs and greeks took it to new heights
      They even had international libraries that drew in ethnic groups from africa, far east, INDIA, europe and more
      They obviously far surpassed whatever Hindus came up on their own
      Your just a very salty individual
      Arabs far surpassed whatever indians could do
      Ironically the only time that india led the world economically and wealth wise was under mughal empire lol hey encompassed 25% of the GDP in world under the reign of shah jahan and aurengzebs early years

  • @UntrainableWizard
    @UntrainableWizard Год назад +1

    You ever have your brain completely reject 1 seconds worth of information?
    I watched that Roman Numeral's math 3 times, and it still does not even slightly begin to register in my head.

  • @periodicpenguin9767
    @periodicpenguin9767 4 года назад +9

    How has everyone’s week been?

    • @bbrandumbb
      @bbrandumbb 4 года назад

      Terrible.

    • @omska9325
      @omska9325 4 года назад

      Good, thanks for asking

    • @agentohio1699
      @agentohio1699 4 года назад

      Not great, but not bad either. Kinda, meh.

    • @ZayanK
      @ZayanK 4 года назад

      Pretty okay all things considered, be safe everyone.

    • @minecesar0879
      @minecesar0879 4 года назад

      Good

  • @109Rage
    @109Rage 4 года назад +15

    So you're telling me that while Europe was still using Roman numerals, the Indian, Arabic and Mesoamerican world were all already using objectively superior positional notation?

    • @Apogee012
      @Apogee012 Год назад

      Where'd ya get mesoamerican from 😂😂

    • @109Rage
      @109Rage Год назад

      @@Apogee012 Mesoameria had base-20 numerals, for thousands of years.

    • @Apogee012
      @Apogee012 Год назад

      @@109Rage wtf? really? whats the evidence

    • @Apogee012
      @Apogee012 Год назад

      @@109Rage Are you Talking of Nahuatl? Only Language that comes to mind, did a study of it in school a long time ago, maybe out-dated, but wasn't original Aztec/Nahuatl only Spoken and not written? They couldn't have done Maths using words.

    • @109Rage
      @109Rage Год назад

      @@Apogee012 Talking about the Maya, who had writing long before the Aztec, and the earliest examples of their base-20 numerals is in 36 BC, and it was used in their calendar, which probably means they were around for some time longer than that too. The Maya probably didn't invent the numerals, but rather adopted them from some of their neighbors like the Olmec.
      Also, pretty sure Nahuatl has some form of writing, but it wasn't comprehensive enough to describe their full language (unlike the Mayan writing system)

  • @georgedrivas6690
    @georgedrivas6690 4 года назад +29

    "It was known that XIV+XXXVI=L...obviously!! I AM DYINGGG!!!😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @12yr
    @12yr Год назад +14

    What I love about the Arabic Numberals is that it takes only one stroke of line with the exception of the number '4'
    It makes it really fast to draw

    • @vladof_putler
      @vladof_putler Год назад +2

      *Hindu Arabic

    • @PK-se2jh
      @PK-se2jh Год назад +4

      Weirdly Indian invented all of these including 0 but they get no credit at all. Whole name is changed to "Arabic numerals" just because europeans got them from middle east

    • @nicholasvinen
      @nicholasvinen Год назад +1

      You can write 4 with one stroke if you do the closed top (similar to a triangle) version.

    • @RustedGreatBascinet
      @RustedGreatBascinet Год назад +9

      @@PK-se2jh Weirdly, the Arabs actually developed the system, made it proper, and used it for mathematics instead of just being a concept.

    • @grammy1620
      @grammy1620 Год назад

      5 takes two strokes