That realization sparked the need of dragons to look for the help of their gods, marking the prophesied "turning". After the last Rage of Dragons, in 1373 DR, the dragon population of Faerûn was greatly reduced in number. It was prophesied among the few remaining worshipers of the draconic gods that a " Turning of the Great Cycle" would foretell the return of religious fervor among dragonkind. However, this plane was destroyed by the Spellplague in 1385 DR, and the draconic deities drifted to the domains of other gods. Īlthough members of the draconic pantheon had personal lairs and domains in many of the outer planes, their own plane was the Dragon Eyrie. Only the followers of Bahamut and Tiamat didn't lose their faith toward their gods, and continued fighting in what was known as the Dragonfall War. It was speculated that several members of the original draconic pantheon just died and vanished from the multiverse due to the lack of worship. This started the dragon's apathy toward their gods, which lasted for thousands of years. Whatever the truth, eventually most dragons turned away from the war and from religion in general. Some believe this behavior was influenced by the god Zorquan as a way to stop the dragon wars. Over time, draconic philosophers came to the conclusion that all of the fighting was wasteful and that gods who allowed such behavior were not worthy of their worship. Dragons of that time were devout followers of their gods, and such devotion sparked intense wars, dubbed as the Draco Holy Wars, over philosophical differences not only between different species but also within species. The draconic pantheon was one of the oldest pantheons of gods on Toril, being worshiped by dragonkind since the creation of their race around −30,000 DR. The other members of the pantheon, according to these sages, were mortal dragons who had acquired their greatwyrm status and developed their dragonsight, reaching a sort of apotheosis after joining with many echoes of themselves and/or coordinating their actions with their echoes across the many worlds of the Material plane, gaining godlike powers in the process. According to these sages, who had studied the ancient draconic poem Elegy for the First World, the only dragon gods that were actually "divine" in nature where Bahamut and Tiamat, who were the primordial dragons that where born from the Material Plane since the beginning of time. Some sages of the 15 th century DR believed that the dragon gods weren't actually gods, at least in the ontological sense when compared to the gods that hailed from the Outer Planes.
In the Outer Planes, it was believed that in fact Null was two different gods, Chronepsis and Falazure or that both gods were different faces of the same two-aspected deity. Kuyutha: A dragonborn demigod who served Bahamut.
Known in the Outer Planes as Aasterinian. Hlal: Goddess of humor, inventiveness, and pleasure, and also the messenger of Asgorath.Garyx: God of fire, destruction, and renewal.He became a member of the Faerûnian pantheon sometime after the Spellplague. Bahamut: Originally known as Xymor, he was the god of enlightened justice and good dragonkind.Astilabor: Goddess of acquisitiveness and wealth.Regarded as the creator of all dragonkind and, in some sources, of the multiverse. Asgorath: The leader of the draconic pantheon, he (or she) was presumably not only a god, but also a primordial.The pantheon consisted of the gods worshiped mostly by dragons, though some of these deities also had among their worshipers half-dragons, kobolds, lizardfolk, troglodytes, spellscales, and even humans and dragonborn.