C Curriculum Explorer
Mathematics·Number Representation & Place Value·conceptual

Roman numerals to 100

Read Roman numerals to 100 (I to C) and understand that the numeral system changed over time to include zero and place value

Suggested ages 8–9

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Learning journey

Your child is working with larger numbers up to 10,000 — understanding place value in four-digit numbers, learning to round numbers, and exploring negative numbers and Roman numerals.

Evidence of understanding

  • Read and write Roman numerals I, V, X, L, C and combinations up to 100
  • Convert between Roman numerals and Hindu-Arabic numerals (e.g. XLIV = 44)
  • Explain that Roman numerals have no zero and no place-value system

Assessment prompt

Can Roman numerals to 100 read Roman numerals like XIV (14) or XLII (42) — and do they know why we stopped using Roman numerals for most things once zero and place value were invented?

Standards alignment

Ma/KS2/Y4/NPV/9GB · uk-nc-2013

Roman numerals

The national curriculum in England: Key stages 1 and 2 framework document · Key Stage 2