In this thread, I'd to explore the plausbility of the hypothesis that the Old Gods are the remnants of the Evanuris, and what that would mean for other key events in Thedas' history.
Observations:
(1) There are several very close links from the elven gods to dragons. First, there's Mythal/Flemeth, who can shapeshift into a dragon, and who is depicted as a human/dragon hybrid in her temple. Furthermore, one of the ancient elven texts in the Arbor Wilds indicates that this shapeshifting was known to Elvhenan, and that the dragon form was reserved for the gods: "He took on a form reserved for the gods and their chosen, and dared to fly in the shape of the divine".
(2) The timeline makes first mention of the Old Gods around -1600 TE, the same time the Golden City was first mentioned. The City, of course, can't have existed as this mythical place before the creation of the Veil, but there is no reason why the same should apply to the Old Gods, unless their appearance is also linked to the creation of the Veil.
(3) We can place the creation of the Veil between -1900 TE at the earliest and around -1650 TE at the latest. It has to be later than -1900 TE because the sources indicate that the elves were still immortal when they encountered humans for the first time, and it can't have been later than -1650 TE because it's then the elves noticed the quickening for the first time (WoTI). It *can* be an accident that the Old Gods appeared on the scene so soon after the creation of the Veil, but given the evidence of (1), I think we have a reason to make a connection.
(4) At the end of Trespasser, we can ask Solas whether sundering the Veil won't bring the Evanuris back, and his answer "I have plans" suggests that there's indeed a danger of that. Which means, wherever the Evanuris were banished, the place will become accessible - and escapable - if the Veil is sundered.
(5) Solas reacts with uncommon anger to the Warden's plan to kill the remaining Old Gods. Meanwhile, from what we know, there is no reason to assume that killing an uncorrupted Old God would have any more adverse side effects than killing an Archdemon. It appears, then, that Solas knows something of the Old Gods that we don't, and the most plausible reason for that is that they're connected with something he did.
(6) There were seven Old Gods. There were nine elven gods, but Fen'Harel and Mythal weren't among the banished ones, that leaves seven.
The Hypothesis and its implications:
The basic statement of the hypothesis is: "The Old Gods are what's left of the Evanuris". Well, we know that Solas fought the Evanuris and prevented them from affecting the world in some way, so the assumption that the tale of the Old Gods' imprisonment and the banishment of the elven gods are the same thing almost suggests itself. The Chantry tale doesn't give us a timeline of the Old Gods' imprisonment, but the evidence suggests that would've taken place a signficant period of time before the first Blight. Various sources (Corypheus, Codex entries in Here Lies the Abyss) say that Dumat had contact with her worshippers right until the First Blight, which means that the imprisoned Old Gods weren't prevented from communicating. However, they couldn't have been in the Golden City, for we know that the Archdemons-to-be slept underground (or sort-of-slept, given that they could still communicate).
So what about the tale that the Old Gods whispered to humans from the Golden City? The funny thing is, there is no way anyone could've ever known whether the Old Gods actually resided in the City before the Seven visited the place. The only source we have about that is priests communicating with their gods, and they (the gods) can't be considered a reliable source. Given how the imprisoned Old Gods could communicate, and how Corypheus was perplexed when he couldn't hear Dumat's voice, it's plausible to assume that there was some truth to priests' accounts of communication with them, but there is no way the priests could know from where their gods contacted them.
So here's the first implication:
(I) Solas trapped The Evanuris in their dragon form and imprisoned them under ground, separated from most of their power so that they couldn't escape. They could still communicate, though, and as the Old Gods, they contacted humans and started to orchestrate conditions that would ultimately end with their escape. They were never in the Golden City.
This neatly explains everything that happened, up to the Seven's visit of the Golden City.
The Golden City and the Blight:
OK, so the Old Gods were never in the Golden City, but it must contain something they want, since they were so interested in humans going there. The important question here is this: what happened when the Seven entered the City, that it made it possible for the Old Gods to get free as Archdemons? Well, the obvious answer is "The darkspawn happened". If the first darkspawn were created as a fallout of the Seven's expedition, then they could've plausibly been the first available tool for freeing the Old Gods. The Old Gods called to them, they came and corrupted and freed the Old God.
That results in more questions though: what exactly did the darkspawn have that the corruption could awaken an Old God? Well, they have the Blight. And that, in the end, connects the Blight to the Evanuris and ties in to the common hypothesis that the Golden City is the Fade-side aspect of old Arlathan, while the solid-world-side aspect was the city Tevinter attacked and sacked in 700 TE.
Next question: What exactly *is* the Blight, that it can empower the sleeping Old Gods that way. Here, I'm going out on a limb and speculate:
(II) When the Veil was created, everyone and everything with an intrinsic link to both aspects of reality was sundered into two parts. That's how the elves lost their immortality and how remants of the sundered places came to exist on both sides of the Veil. The Evanuris, too, were sundered, that's why Solas could imprison them and that's why he ultimately created the Veil, and their Fade-side aspect was left in the place that became the Golden City and either became touched by the Blight or became the Blight itself. In any case, it was carried out of the City by the Seven when they left and came into the world again, and thus could re-enable the Old Gods.
It follows, then, that if the Veil is dismantled, it will be possible for the Evanuris to become whole again, possibly at the price of catching the Blight like Corypheus. So why was Solas angry about the Wardens' plans? He should've been glad that the last remaining Old Gods would be killed, right? Well, except if they wouldn't be truly killed, but instead rendered to a state comparable to Mythal's before she joined with Flemeth - a being of little power, but free to roam the world. Free, after the Veil is dismantled, to go back to old Arlathan and become whole again. Dumat was killed but his altar in DA2: Legacy was still active, so the possibility that something of Dumat still exists can't be discounted.
I think this hypothesis neatly answers a number of questions about key events in Thedas' history. Whether this is what really happened, we'll possibly get to know in the next DA game. The most nagging unsolved question is "What exactly is the Blight".
I'm open to suggestions, extensions, refutation attempts and suchlike.





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