Enoch Calendar — Prophetic Reference

The Empires of Daniel

From Babylon to the Kingdom That Has No End

Daniel saw the succession of world empires three times, in three different visions, under three different symbolic systems. Each system converges on the same sequence — and the visions of Daniel 8 explicitly name two of them, locking the identifications. This page sets the three systems side by side.

The Three Vision-Systems Side by Side

Empire Daniel 2 — Statue Daniel 7 — Beasts Daniel 8 — Animals Approx. Dates
Babylon Head of gold Lion with eagle's wings 626 – 539 BC
Medo-Persia Breast & arms of silver Bear raised on one side Ram with two horns 539 – 331 BC
Greece Belly & thighs of brass Leopard, 4 wings, 4 heads He-goat with great horn 331 – 168 BC
Successor kingdoms (4 heads of leopard) 4 horns from broken great horn 323 – 30 BC
Rome Legs of iron Dreadful beast, iron teeth 63 BC – 476 AD
Final form Feet of iron & clay 10 horns + little horn
God's Kingdom Stone cut without hands Son of Man Now & not yet
The Empires in Detail
Empire 1  ·  King 3 of Revelation
Babylon
"Thou art this head of gold."
626 – 539 BC
Daniel 2
Head of gold
Dan 2:32, 37–38
Daniel 7
Lion with eagle's wings
Dan 7:4
Daniel 8
Not depicted
(vision begins later)

The Neo-Babylonian Empire was the empire of Daniel's captivity, and it is the only empire in the four-empire sequence that Daniel himself names directly. Standing before Nebuchadnezzar, Daniel interpreted the king's dream of the multi-metal statue and identified the first kingdom without ambiguity: "Thou art this head of gold."

In Daniel 7, the same empire appears as a lion with eagle's wings — the lion at the top of the food chain on land, the eagle at the top of the sky. The wings being plucked off and a man's heart being given to it likely depicts Nebuchadnezzar's seven years of madness in Daniel 4, when the most powerful man on earth was reduced to grazing in the fields like an ox until reason returned to him.

"Thou, O king, art a king of kings: for the God of heaven hath given thee a kingdom, power, and strength, and glory… Thou art this head of gold." Daniel 2:37–38 KJV
Historical Fulfillment
Nabopolassar founded the Neo-Babylonian Empire in 626 BC when he revolted against Assyria. His son Nebuchadnezzar II (605–562 BC) defeated Egypt at Carchemish in 605 BC, deported Daniel and the royal youths that same year, destroyed Jerusalem and burned the Temple in 586 BC, and built Babylon into the largest and most magnificent city of the ancient world. The empire ended on the night of 16 Tishri, 539 BC, when Cyrus's general Gobryas entered the city without a battle — the night of Belshazzar's feast and Daniel's reading of the writing on the wall (Dan 5).
Sources Daniel 2:32, 37–38 Daniel 4 Daniel 5 Daniel 7:4 2 Kings 24–25 Jeremiah 25:11
Empire 2  ·  King 4 of Revelation
Medo-Persia
"The kings of Media and Persia."
539 – 331 BC
Daniel 2
Breast & arms of silver
Dan 2:32, 39
Daniel 7
Bear raised on one side, three ribs in its mouth
Dan 7:5
Daniel 8
Ram with two horns, one higher
Dan 8:3–4, 20

Daniel 8 names this empire explicitly. The ram with two horns is interpreted by the angel Gabriel in plain language: "The ram which thou sawest having two horns are the kings of Media and Persia." This is the load-bearing identification — once the ram is named, the corresponding silver of Daniel 2 and the bear of Daniel 7 are fixed by parallel.

Each symbol carries its detail. The two horns are Media and Persia, with the higher horn (Persia) coming up last — Cyrus the Persian subdued Media in 550 BC, before turning west. The bear "raised up on one side" carries the same picture: Persia became the dominant element. The three ribs in the bear's mouth are commonly identified as Persia's three great conquests — Lydia (546 BC), Babylon (539 BC), and Egypt (525 BC).

"The ram which thou sawest having two horns are the kings of Media and Persia." Daniel 8:20 KJV
Historical Fulfillment
Cyrus the Great captured Babylon in 539 BC, and in his first year as king issued the decree permitting the Jewish exiles to return (538 BC, Ezra 1; Cyrus Cylinder). The Achaemenid Persian Empire became the largest the world had yet seen, stretching from the Indus to the Aegean. Its kings recur throughout the postexilic books: Cyrus (Ezra 1), Darius I (Haggai, Zechariah, Ezra 6), Xerxes I — the Ahasuerus of Esther — and Artaxerxes I, whose twentieth year (445 BC) issued the decree to Nehemiah that begins Daniel's seventy weeks. The empire ended in 331 BC, when Alexander the Great destroyed the Persian army at Gaugamela; Darius III was murdered the following year.
Sources Daniel 2:32, 39 Daniel 5:28–31 Daniel 7:5 Daniel 8:3–4, 20 Ezra 1; 6 Esther 1 Nehemiah 2
Empire 3  ·  King 5 of Revelation
Greece
"The rough goat is the king of Grecia."
331 – 168 BC
Daniel 2
Belly & thighs of brass
Dan 2:32, 39
Daniel 7
Leopard with four wings and four heads
Dan 7:6
Daniel 8
He-goat with notable horn between his eyes
Dan 8:5–8, 21

Like Medo-Persia, Greece is named explicitly in Daniel 8: "The rough goat is the king of Grecia: and the great horn that is between his eyes is the first king." The first king is Alexander. The goat ran "on the face of the whole earth, and touched not the ground" — an astonishing description of the speed of Alexander's campaign, which conquered the Persian Empire in only three years (334–331 BC).

The four wings and four heads of the Daniel 7 leopard, and the four horns of the Daniel 8 he-goat after the great horn was broken, all carry the same picture: at the height of his power, the king fell, and his empire was divided into four. Alexander died in Babylon in 323 BC at age thirty-two with no clear heir, and after a generation of succession wars his empire stabilized into four major successor kingdoms.

"The rough goat is the king of Grecia: and the great horn that is between his eyes is the first king. Now that being broken, whereas four stood up for it, four kingdoms shall stand up out of the nation, but not in his power." Daniel 8:21–22 KJV
Historical Fulfillment
Alexander the Great became king of Macedon at age twenty in 336 BC. He crossed the Hellespont in 334 BC, defeated Darius III at the Granicus, then at Issus (333), then decisively at Gaugamela in 331 BC. He took Persepolis, conquered through to the Indus, returned to Babylon, and died there of fever in 323 BC at age 32. His generals — the Diadochi — fought for the succession until the Battle of Ipsus (301 BC) and finally the Battle of Corupedium (281 BC) settled the configuration into four kingdoms.
Sources Daniel 2:32, 39 Daniel 7:6 Daniel 8:5–8, 21–22 Daniel 11:3–4
Empire 3 · b
The Four Successor Kingdoms
"Four kingdoms shall stand up out of the nation, but not in his power."
323 – 30 BC
Daniel 2
Not separately depicted
(part of brass)
Daniel 7
Four heads of the leopard
Dan 7:6
Daniel 8
Four horns toward the four winds
Dan 8:8, 22

After the wars of the Diadochi, Alexander's empire stabilized — though never reunified — into four major successor kingdoms, each ruled by one of his generals or their heirs. The Bible refers to two of them repeatedly in Daniel 11, where they appear as the king of the north (the Seleucids, in Syria and Mesopotamia) and the king of the south (the Ptolemies, in Egypt). Their wars, which spanned more than a century and a half, are described in Daniel 11 with such specificity that some critics have insisted the chapter must have been written after the fact.

The Daniel 11 prophecy passes through these dynasties, reaches Antiochus IV Epiphanes — the Seleucid king who desecrated the Jerusalem Temple in 167 BC by erecting an altar to Zeus on the altar of burnt offering and sacrificing a pig there — and then continues. The Maccabean revolt that followed (167–164 BC) recovered and rededicated the Temple, the rededication preserved in the Festival of Hanukkah.

The Four Kingdoms
Cassander — Macedonia and Greece (until 168 BC, when Rome defeated Perseus at Pydna and absorbed Macedonia).
Lysimachus — Thrace and parts of Asia Minor (until 281 BC, killed at Corupedium; territory absorbed).
Seleucus — Syria, Mesopotamia, and the eastern reaches (until 63 BC, when Pompey annexed Syria for Rome). This is the "king of the north" of Daniel 11.
Ptolemy — Egypt (until 30 BC, when Cleopatra VII died and Octavian annexed Egypt as a Roman province). This is the "king of the south" of Daniel 11.
"And the king of the south shall be strong, and one of his princes; and he shall be strong above him, and have dominion; his dominion shall be a great dominion." Daniel 11:5 KJV — the first verse of the prophecy of the Seleucid-Ptolemaic wars
Sources Daniel 7:6 Daniel 8:8, 22 Daniel 11:5–35 1 Maccabees 1
Empire 4  ·  King 6 of Revelation
Rome
"A fourth kingdom, strong as iron."
63 BC – 476 AD
Daniel 2
Legs of iron
Dan 2:33, 40
Daniel 7
Fourth beast: dreadful, terrible, iron teeth
Dan 7:7, 19, 23
Daniel 8
Not depicted
(vision ends with Greece)

Daniel 8 does not depict Rome — that vision is concerned with Persia and Greece, the two kingdoms named explicitly by Gabriel. But Daniel 2 and Daniel 7 both depict a fourth kingdom that arises after Greece and is unlike the others. In Daniel 2 it is iron — strong, breaking and crushing what came before. In Daniel 7 it is dreadful, terrible, and strong exceedingly, with great iron teeth that devour, break in pieces, and stamp the residue with its feet.

Rome did exactly this. It absorbed the four Greek successor kingdoms one by one — Macedonia in 168 BC, Pergamum in 133 BC, Syria in 63 BC, Egypt in 30 BC. It rolled over the Hasmonean state when Pompey took Jerusalem in 63 BC and entered the Holy of Holies. It governed Judea through the procuratorial system in the time of Christ. It destroyed the Second Temple in 70 AD, scattered the Jewish nation in 135 AD after the Bar Kokhba revolt, and dominated the Mediterranean world for centuries.

It is also during Rome — and only during Rome — that the great act of the chronological chain takes place. The seventy weeks of Daniel 9 run from the decree to Nehemiah (445 BC, late Persian period) to the cutting off of Messiah (32 AD, Roman period). Rome was the empire of the cross.

"And the fourth kingdom shall be strong as iron: forasmuch as iron breaketh in pieces and subdueth all things: and as iron that breaketh all these, shall it break in pieces and bruise." Daniel 2:40 KJV
Historical Fulfillment
Rome's dominance over the Daniel-relevant region began with Pompey's annexation of Syria and capture of Jerusalem in 63 BC. The Republic transitioned to Empire under Augustus in 27 BC. Christ was born under Augustus, executed under Tiberius, and the Church spread through the Pax Romana — Roman roads, Roman law, Roman Greek. The Western Empire collapsed in 476 AD when Odoacer deposed Romulus Augustulus; the Eastern Empire (Byzantium) endured until 1453 AD. Rome is unique among the four empires in that it did not fall to a single successor — instead, the iron broke into pieces, mixed with clay, and entered the divided final form.
Sources Daniel 2:33, 40–43 Daniel 7:7, 19, 23 Daniel 9:26 Luke 2:1 Matthew 22:21
Empire 4 · b
The Final Divided Form
"Iron mixed with miry clay — they shall not cleave one to another."
Daniel 2
Feet of iron mixed with miry clay
Dan 2:33, 41–43
Daniel 7
Ten horns + a little horn
Dan 7:7–8, 20–25
Daniel 8
Not depicted
(see Dan 8:23–25 for related)

The fourth kingdom in Daniel does not give way to a fifth kingdom in time. Instead, it enters a final phase in which the iron remains but is mixed with clay — strength alongside brittleness, partly strong, partly broken, "they shall not cleave one to another, even as iron is not mixed with miry clay." Daniel 7 describes the same phase with different imagery: the dreadful beast develops ten horns, and among them a little horn arises which speaks great things against the Most High, wears out the saints, and thinks to change times and laws, for a time, and times, and the dividing of time.

Christian interpreters have offered three main readings of what this phase corresponds to historically. None is settled, and this page does not aim to choose between them; the strength of the prophecy lies in what Daniel does say, not in any one school's identification of when or where.

What Daniel Tells Us About This Phase
It follows Rome, not a fifth empire. Daniel 2's sequence ends at the legs of iron and continues into the same empire's feet. The fourth kingdom takes a final form rather than yielding to a fifth.

It is divided. The feet are not iron alone; they are iron and clay together, partly strong, partly broken. The unity of the iron is gone.

It contains a hostile figure. A little horn (Dan 7:8, 20–25) speaks against the Most High, wears out the saints, and rules for "a time and times and the dividing of time" — 3½ prophetic years (cf. Rev 12:14). Three of the ten horns are plucked up before him.

It is ended by the stone. The image is not weathered away by erosion. It is struck on the feet by a stone cut out without hands, which breaks the entire statue to pieces and grinds it to chaff (Dan 2:34–35).
"And whereas thou sawest the feet and toes, part of potter's clay, and part of iron, the kingdom shall be divided; but there shall be in it of the strength of the iron, forasmuch as thou sawest the iron mixed with miry clay… they shall not cleave one to another, even as iron is not mixed with miry clay." Daniel 2:41, 43 KJV
Sources Daniel 2:33, 41–45 Daniel 7:7–8, 19–27 Daniel 8:23–25 Revelation 13; 17
The Kingdom That Has No End
The Stone — The Son of Man
"His dominion is an everlasting dominion, which shall not pass away."
Now & not yet
Daniel 2
Stone cut without hands
Dan 2:34–35, 44–45
Daniel 7
One like the Son of Man
Dan 7:13–14, 27
Daniel 8
Not depicted
(vision scope is Persia & Greece)

The succession of empires does not end in Daniel with the fall of Rome or with a final divided form. It ends with a kingdom unlike any of them — one not raised by human conquest, not assembled by armies, not bounded by the rise and fall of civilizations. In Daniel 2, this kingdom appears as a stone cut out of a mountain without hands, which strikes the image on its feet and shatters it. The stone then becomes a great mountain and fills the whole earth. In Daniel 7, the same kingdom appears as one like the Son of Man, coming with the clouds of heaven, given dominion and glory and a kingdom that shall not pass away.

The Son of Man — the title Christ used for himself more than any other in the Gospels — is a direct citation of Daniel 7. When Christ stood before the Sanhedrin and was asked whether he was the Messiah, he answered with the words of this vision: "Ye shall see the Son of man sitting on the right hand of power, and coming in the clouds of heaven" (Mark 14:62). The high priest tore his clothes and called it blasphemy. He understood exactly which prophecy was being claimed.

"In the days of these kings shall the God of heaven set up a kingdom, which shall never be destroyed." The kingdom was inaugurated at Christ's first coming — in the days of the fourth empire, Rome — and it will be consummated at his return. The stone is already in flight.

"I saw in the night visions, and, behold, one like the Son of man came with the clouds of heaven, and came to the Ancient of days, and they brought him near before him. And there was given him dominion, and glory, and a kingdom, that all people, nations, and languages, should serve him: his dominion is an everlasting dominion, which shall not pass away, and his kingdom that which shall not be destroyed." Daniel 7:13–14 KJV
"And in the days of these kings shall the God of heaven set up a kingdom, which shall never be destroyed: and the kingdom shall not be left to other people, but it shall break in pieces and consume all these kingdoms, and it shall stand for ever." Daniel 2:44 KJV
Sources Daniel 2:34–35, 44–45 Daniel 7:13–14, 27 Matthew 26:64 Mark 14:62 Revelation 11:15
A Note on the Three Visions

Daniel's three vision-systems — the statue, the four beasts, the ram and goat — are not three different prophecies but one prophecy delivered three times, each time in a different symbolic register. Daniel 2 is given to a Gentile king (Nebuchadnezzar) and uses the imagery of metals, which any ancient hearer would have understood: gold above, lower metals below, weakness at the foundation. Daniel 7 is given to Daniel himself and uses the imagery of beasts, drawing on the deep biblical association between beasts and Gentile nations. Daniel 8 is given to Daniel later and is the most specific — the angel Gabriel names two of the empires directly.

The convergence of the three is what locks the identifications. The ram is Medo-Persia by Gabriel's own word; therefore the silver and the bear are also Medo-Persia. The he-goat is Greece by Gabriel's own word; therefore the brass and the leopard are also Greece. From those two anchors, the head of gold (which Daniel himself names as Babylon) and the legs of iron (which arise after Greece) are fixed by sequence. Daniel saw the same future three times in three different ways, and the three pictures hold together as one.