¡ÝThe Roman Numeral System:
Numeral system was decimal system or quinary, the subtractive principle, in which a symbol for a smaller
unit placed before a symbol for a larger unit means the
difference of the two units, was used only sparingly in ancient
and medieval times.
1 |
5 |
10 |
50 |
10©÷ |
500 |
10©ø |
I |
V |
X |
L |
C |
D |
M |
Thus,
1944=MDCCCCXXXXIIII
1994=MCMXLIV
This way disabled them from calculating multi-digits number so
they used abacus.
¡ÝThe Hindu-Arabic Numeral System: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,0
The Hindu-Arabic numeral system is named after the Hindus, who may have
invented it, and after the Arabs, who transmitted it to western Europe.; The Persian mathematician al-Khowarizmi describes such a completed Hindu system
used position value or 0(zero)in a book of A.D. 825.
It is not certain when this numeral system transmitted to
Europe but this system was used all over the Europe about 13th century.
The dispute between the abacist and the algorist went
on. Finally, the abacus disappeared in 18th century.

Our word zero probably comes from the Latinized form zephirum
of the Arabic sifr, which in turn is a translation of
the Hindu sunya, meaning "void" of "empty."
By virtue of the symbol of '0' the decimal system
was established. And so we can use four operations more freely than ever.