: Okay lets see if we can make evryone happy-ish.
: Mjarin, former hero of the wind age, becomes corrupted by
: the leveller, because the Leveller can't poses him
: because he's still alive, he the joins Warlocks,
: becomes leader.
: When the Levellers power reaches its peak, he was
: supposed to posses Mjarin, but Mjarin isn;t so hot on
: being killed and possesed, so he makes a deal, I give
: you Moagim, you teach me Magic. so he ressurects
: Moagim, maybe he found the body and head and attachted
: someone elses arms or something.Moagim teaches him the
: magics, however Mjarin plots against Moagim, because
: he is not the Leveller he seeks conquest not death.
: This explains his un-Levellerish actions and makes
: Myth III make allot more sense really.
: So Basically, Moagim WAS the Leveller, Mjarin pretended
: to be on the Levellers side, pretended to be on the
: Cath Bruigs side, but as usual was only on his own
: side.
: -zeph
Sorry to poke holes in your unifying theory, but Moagim was drawn and quartered and his pieces dragged away after he summoned the Myrkridia at the start of the Wind Age. As I said before, I think that "Moagim Reborn" was really the hero who defeated (the real) Moagim, impersonating his old enemy to intimidate the Cath Bruig. Mjarin was his pawn who was granted powers such as being able to live even as a severed head. Then "Moagim" was somehow beheaded and burnt to ashes, his minion Bahl'al was imprisoned below the Cloudspine and his minion Mjarin's head was buried in Muirthemne. No-one ever suspected the truth about "Moagim Reborn" except a few scholars, and it became widely accepted that Moagim had really returned (explaining why the Myth I journal writer said that Connacht drove the evil Moagim from the earth).
This may not make everyone happy, but it makes the most sense (to me).