Daniel 7:24
And the ten horns out of this kingdom are ten kings that shall arise: and another shall rise after them; and he shall be diverse from the first, and he shall subdue three kings.
Cross-reference
In Daniel 7:8, a little horn uproots three horns, exactly the action described for the little king in the vision.
In Daniel 7:20, the ten horns and the boastful little horn are introduced — verse 24 then explains their identity as kings.
Daniel 7:7 depicts the fourth beast with ten horns — the visual image that 7:24 interprets as ten kings.
In Daniel 2:41, the ten toes of the statue symbolize ten kings, paralleling the ten horns in the later vision.
Daniel 2:42 describes ten toes of iron and clay symbolizing a divided kingdom — parallel to the ten horns as ten kings from the same final kingdom.
In Daniel 8:9-12, a little horn grows powerful and attacks God's people, paralleling the boastful king from the earlier vision.
In Daniel 11:36, a king magnifies himself above God, mirroring the arrogance of the little horn.
In 2 Thessalonians 2:3-10, the man of lawlessness exalts himself, fulfilling the pattern of the little horn's rebellion.
In Revelation 13:1, the beast's ten horns with ten diadems directly correspond to the ten kings from Daniel 7:24.
In Revelation 17:12, the ten horns are explicitly identified as ten kings, directly mirroring the interpretation of the horns in Daniel's vision.
Revelation 12:3 depicts a dragon with ten horns — linking to the ten kings from Daniel 7:24 as the source of antichristian power.
In Revelation 17:13, the ten kings give authority to the beast, a development of the ten kings from Daniel's vision.
In Revelation 17:16-18, the ten kings turn against Babylon, expanding on the role of the ten kings in Daniel.