Do you count combustion based light sources? Because my Kosmos oil lamp (which is a good lamp) puts out approximately 250w of power for approximately the same light output as an 15w light bulb.
Furthermore, it's all hard to compare. There were quite inefficient discharge lamps such as CO2 lamps in the late 19th century that were of less efficiency than "today's" high power incandescent lamps. In their own day, they may have been a moderate improvement in efficiency over carbon filament lamps but those things never caught on as general lighting because of the high voltage needed.
Neon runway lighting is on par with your average incandescent lamp.
Then you got those Nernst lamps. I have no efficiency figures for those. Carbon arc lamps are comparable to modern incandescents, but in their day they were much better than carbon filament lamps - not in the least because they offered a very high color temperature combined with power levels that could be cranked up into the kW levels, rather than a dim yellow/orange glow.
Check out
www.lamptech.co.uk for actual hard data about various types of lamps that were actually in full scale production.