Ancient Greeks used letters and extra symbols to represent digits. But one thing it seems the ancient Greeks did not invent was the counting system on which many of their greatest thinkers based their pioneering calculations.
New research suggests the Greeks borrowed their system known as alphabetic numerals from the Egyptians, and did not develop it themselves as was long believed.
Trade Explosion
An analysis by Dr. Stephen Chrisomalis of McGill University in Montreal, Canada, showed striking similarities between Greek alphabetic numerals and Egyptian demotic numerals, used in Egypt from the late 8th Century BC until around AD 450.
Both systems use nine signs in each "base" so that individual units are counted 1-9, tens are counted 10-90 and so on. Both systems also lack a symbol for zero.
Dr. Chrisomalis proposes that an explosion in trade between Greece and Egypt after 600 BC led to the system being adopted by the Greeks.
Greek merchants may have seen the demotic system in use in Egypt and adapted it for their own purposes.
"We know there was an enormous amount of contact between the Greeks and Egyptians at this time," Dr. Chrisomalis told BBC News Online.
'Plausible' Theory
Professor David Joyce, a mathematician at Clark University in Worcester, US, said he had not examined Dr. Chrisomalis' research, but thought the link was plausible.
"Egyptians used hieratic and, later, demotic script where the multiple symbols looked more like single symbols," said Professor Joyce.
"Instead of seven vertical strokes, a particular squiggle was used. That's the same scheme used in the Greek alphabetic numerals."
Traditionally, the system is thought to have been developed by Greeks in western Asia Minor, in modern day Turkey.
Between 475 BC and 325 BC, alphabetic numerals fell out of use in favour of a system of written numbers known as acrophonic numerals.
But from the late 4th Century BC onwards, alphabetic numerals became the preferred system throughout the Greek-speaking world.
They were used until the fall of the Byzantine Empire in the 15th Century.
This research was published in the journal Antiquity Publications (The Egyptian origin of the Greek alphabetic numerals, Stephen Chrisomalis, Volume: 77 Number: 297 Page: 485–496).
You can also read:
Neubauer, Otto, Exact Sciences in Antiquity, New York: Dover Publishings, 1969,
pp. 17, 22.
Marshak, Alexander, The Roots of Civilization: The Cognitive Beginnings of Man's First Art, Symbol and Notation, Mount Kisco, N.Y: Moyer Bell, 1991 pp. 27-30.