Revelation 17:12

And the ten horns which thou sawest are ten kings, which have received no kingdom as yet; but receive power as kings one hour with the beast.

Cross-reference

Revelation 17:16 shows these same ten horns later turning on the harlot — using the authority they received in 17:12.

Revelation 12:3 shows a dragon with ten horns; in 17:12 these ten horns are interpreted as ten kings ruling with the beast, fulfilling the imagery.

In Revelation 13:1, the beast emerges with ten horns – the same symbol here identified as ten kings who rule briefly with the beast.

Revelation 19:19 depicts the beast and kings of earth gathering for war — these include the ten kings who received authority in 17:12.

Daniel 7:7 Allusion

Daniel 7:7 depicts a fourth beast with ten horns – the direct source for the ten horns imagery that Revelation interprets as ten kings.

Daniel 7:8 Allusion

Daniel 7:8 introduces a little horn rising among the ten, uprooting three – adding detail to the ten kings' narrative that Revelation 17:12 summarizes.

Daniel 7:20 Allusion

Daniel 7:20 again mentions the ten horns and the little horn – reinforcing the prophetic imagery that Revelation applies to the end-times kings.

Daniel 7:24 Parallel

Daniel 7:24 explicitly states 'the ten horns are ten kings' – the identical interpretation Revelation 17:12 uses, making this a direct parallel.

Daniel 2:41 Allusion

Daniel 2:41 provides the OT image of ten toes/kingdoms, forming the prophetic foundation for the ten kings in Revelation.