The Roman numeral DLXVII equals 567.
DLXVII is built by adding these Roman numeral groups together:
Add them up: D + L + X + V + II = 567.
| Number | Roman numeral |
|---|---|
| 564 | DLXIV |
| 565 | DLXV |
| 566 | DLXVI |
| 567 | DLXVII |
| 568 | DLXVIII |
| 569 | DLXIX |
| 570 | DLXX |
Roman numerals use seven letters, each with a fixed value: I = 1, V = 5, X = 10, L = 50, C = 100, D = 500, and M = 1000. Numbers are formed by combining these symbols and adding their values, working from the largest to the smallest.
When a smaller symbol appears before a larger one, it is subtracted instead of added — this is the subtractive rule. For example, IV is 4 (5 − 1) and IX is 9 (10 − 1). The same idea gives XL (40), XC (90), CD (400), and CM (900). The same symbol is never repeated more than three times in a row.
| Symbol | Value |
|---|---|
| I | 1 |
| V | 5 |
| X | 10 |
| L | 50 |
| C | 100 |
| D | 500 |
| M | 1,000 |