I don't believe I have read this interpretation before.... but I certainly can understand how you arrived at it. I do believe that most interpreters believe that Rome is the 4th kingdom, and ALL (except me of course), claims that the four generals that come after Alexander represent the four kingdoms --- and out of one of them comes the little horn. Thus, they ALL contend this to be AE. Sp, even though our individual interpretations depart from "today's accepted interpretations." perhaps we might go through those verses / prophecies that have determined our interpretations (not too much detail because that might take a few years...). So, if you are willing:
The only way I believe is a good starting point is to make two comments:
1) That Chapter 2 provides us with the "structure" or the "blueprint" for the four and only four kingdoms that will come upon the earth WITHIN His plan of salvation for the Jews and mankind (obviously, there will be hundreds of nations, powers or kingdoms that will come after the cross, but God is only revealing these 4 because He can include all of His prophecies within the timing of these 4 that will / can take us to the end times).
2) Consequently, if we identify the 4 kingdoms in Chapter 2, they will not change regardless of the comments / prophecies, etc., found in the latter chapters of Daniel - 7 - 12.
a) if you accept the two statements above, I would like to suggest the 4 kingdoms revealed in Chapter 2 are:
Babylon, Medes-Persia, Greece, and Rome (first pagan then papal, but still only 4 kingdoms will come out of the sea or earth).
So, I will look forward to your response should you want to continue....
Well I already said that I do not believe that Rome is the fourth kingdom. This is what I believe the scriptures are telling us:
"FIVE HAVE FALLEN"
The Roman Empire of circa 95 / 96 A.D (the approximate date John wrote the Revelation) was not the kingdom or empire "that was, and is not" (Revelation 17:8) (the kingdom that
had existed, but
no longer existed when John received the Revelation).
In other words, "the beast that "was, and is not, and will ascend from out of the abyss" existed
before the Roman Empire (Revelation 17:8 & 11).
This is how the book of Daniel identifies the kingdoms - and Rome is
completely absent from it:-
Daniel 7 symbolizes them as:
(I) Lion: Nebuchadnezzar's Babylonian kingdom.
(II) Bear: Medo-Persian kingdom.
(III) Leopard: Macedonian (Greek) kingdom of Alexander the Great (four heads).
(IV)
A 4th kingdom.
Daniel 8 symbolizes the second kingdom above as a ram, and the third as a goat, and this is what was prophesied about the latter time of that third kingdom (in the latter time of the kings of the Greek kingdom after it was divided into four parts):
Daniel 8:20-25
"The ram which you saw having two horns are the kings of Media and Persia. And the shaggy goat is
the king of Greece. And the great horn between his eyes is the first king. And as for that being broken, and
four stood up in its place; four kingdoms shall stand up out of the nation, but not in its power. And in the latter time of
their kingdom, .."
(in the latter time of the kings of the Greek kingdom after it was divided into four parts)
" ..when the transgressors have come to the full, a king, fierce of face, and skilled at intrigues, shall stand up. And his power shall be mighty, but not by his own power.
And he shall destroy marvelously, and shall prosper and work, and destroy the mighty and the holy people. And also through his understanding, he shall cause deceit to succeed in his hand. And he shall magnify himself in his heart, and by peace shall destroy many. He also shall stand up against the Ruler of rulers. But he shall be broken without a hand."
The above is telling us that the 4th kingdom
already existed, and that it existed in the latter time of the kingdoms which succeeded the Greek kingdom of Alexander the Great. Yet
not everything that is prophesied regarding the 4th kingdom has been fulfilled yet. The reason for this lies in the Revelation.
323 BC: Alexander the Great dies (the Seleucid Empire was only founded by Seleucus after his death).
321-312 BC:
Seleucus took the throne of the Seleucid kingdom - one of the 4 kingdoms that rose out of the 3rd beast - in 321 BC,
but expanded his kingdom by conquest, eventually establishing the Seleucid Empire, in 312 BC.
The Seleucid kingdom eventually
incorporated all the territories of the first two kingdoms mentioned in Daniel chapter 7:
(I) Lion: Nebuchadnezzar's Babylonian kingdom.
(II) Bear: Medo-Persian kingdom.
The history of the four kingdoms which succeeded the kingdom of Alexander the Great that occurred between 312 BC and 223 BC is not pertinent to the prophecy mentioned above, because the prophecy is talking about a king that would arise during
the latter days of those kingdoms.
187 BC-175 BC: Seleucus IV Philopator took the throne in 187 BC, but Philopator was murdered in 175 BC, and his younger brother Antiochus IV Epiphanes seized the throne illegally from his nephew (Philopator's son).
164 BC: Death of Antiochus IV Epiphanes.
The Seleucid Empire had already been losing territory, steadily breaking up into smaller kingdoms, but after the death of Antiochus IV Epiphanes in 164 BC this break-up into smaller kingdoms occurred rapidly, and the former Seleucid Empire ceased to exist as an empire.
Antiochus IV Epiphanes was the last king of that part of the Greek empire.
It was the latter days of the greater part of the Greek kingdom.
30 BC-27 BC: The only part of the former Greek Empire of Alexander the Great that continued to exist as a kingdom after the demise of the Seleucid Empire, was Egypt of the Ptolemy dynasty.
It ceased to exist in 30 BC when the last Queen of Egypt, Cleopatra, died. It officially became
part of the Roman Empire in 27 BC.
The above two halves of the Greek Empire (the Seleucid Empire and Egypt) are the legs of iron. The feet are the same kingdoms ascended from the bottomless pit: Babylon, Media-Persia, Greece, the Seleucid Empire and the Ptolemaic kingdom of Egypt (the last two of which incorporated the four Greek kingdoms that had originally come out of the Diadoche wars), h
ad all ceased to exist as empires and kingdoms by the time John received the Revelation.
Rome - the sixth "head" of the seven-headed beast - existed as an empire at the time John received the Revelation, and John was told that the ten kings that he saw
had not received any kingdom yet.
Those ten kings of Revelation chapters 13 & 17
will also make war with the Lamb (Revelation 17:14),
which again tells us that they will exist (as Revelation 17:11-14 tells us)
with the beast that existed before the days of the Roman Empire - the beast that John was told
will ascend from out of the abyss (Revelation 17:8 & 11-14)
- and that kingdom (beast) is identified in Revelation 13:2 by the symbols of a leopard, a bear and a lion - Greece, Persia and Babylon.