Home

VIII

VIII is the Roman numeral for the number eight. In the standard additive notation, it is written as V followed by III, giving 5 + 3 = 8. This differs from subtractive forms such as IV for four or IX for nine. The symbol appears in any context that uses Roman numerals to indicate order, dates, or quantities.

Historically, VIII has been used to distinguish rulers and religious leaders with the same name. Examples include

In contemporary usage, VIII commonly designates installments or volumes in media and literature, such as Episode

Louis
VIII
of
France,
Henry
VIII
of
England,
and
popes
such
as
John
VIII
and
Benedict
VIII.
In
ordinal
dating,
VIII
marks
the
eighth
year,
the
eighth
volume,
or
the
eighth
century
in
a
sequence,
such
as
the
eighth
century.
VIII
in
a
film
series
or
Symphony
No.
VIII
in
music.
In
science
and
technology,
older
nomenclature
used
Group
VIII
to
denote
a
set
of
elements
in
the
periodic
table;
modern
terminology
typically
refers
to
Group
8.
The
numeral
also
appears
on
clocks
to
indicate
the
time
eight
o’clock
and
in
various
labeling
schemes
that
employ
Roman
numerals
for
organization
or
categorization.