Daniel 11:45

And he shall plant the tabernacles of his palace between the seas in the glorious holy mountain; yet he shall come to his end, and none shall help him.

Cross-reference

Daniel 11:16 shows the same invader standing in the glorious land; verse 45 specifies his final camp between sea and holy mountain, fulfilling his advance.

Daniel 11:41 records the king entering the glorious land and which nations escape; verse 45 shows his final position before his end, continuing the narrative.

Daniel 7:26 Parallel

In Daniel 7:26, the little horn's dominion is taken away and destroyed, directly paralleling the king's end here with no one to help him.

Daniel 8:25 Parallel

In Daniel 8:25, the arrogant king opposing the Prince of princes is broken without hand, mirroring the final destruction of the king in 11:45.

Daniel 7:11 Parallel

In Daniel 7:11, the beast is killed and burned — the same end as the king in 11:45, both from Daniel's intertwined apocalyptic visions.

Daniel 12:1 Historical context

Daniel 12:1 immediately follows the king's end — describing the great tribulation and Michael's deliverance, the direct sequel to 11:45.

Isaiah 14:13 shows the king of Babylon boasting to sit on the mount of assembly in the north—Dan 11:45's king similarly positions himself near God's holy mountain, a proud gesture.

2 Thessalonians 2:4 describes the man of lawlessness sitting in God's temple—Dan 11:45's king camps near the holy mountain, both defying God in His sanctuary.

In 2 Thessalonians 2:8, the lawless one is consumed by Christ's coming, a NT fulfillment of the king's final destruction here.

In Revelation 19:19-21, the beast and kings are thrown into the lake of fire, directly paralleling the death of the king here.

In Ezekiel 39:2, God leads Gog from the north against Israel, parallel to the northern king's campaign ending in judgment.

In Ezekiel 38:22, God judges Gog with plagues of blood, fire, and hailstones, similar divine judgment on the invading king in Daniel.

Joel 2:20 Parallel

Joel 2:20 describes God removing the northern army to the seas—similar to Daniel's king ending between sea and mountain. Both deal with an invading enemy near God's land.

In Revelation 17:8, the beast goes to destruction, mirroring Daniel's king who comes to his end — both are doomed.