

The land the Duigoshz live in is a valley wedge that extends between two mountains from east to west into the sea. High rainfall and the inflow from the mountains ensure a permanently muddy underground here, as well as thousands and thousands of water rivulets that seek their way into the valley, lined up next to each other at intervals of a few metres. The top of the valley wedge is formed by a wide, roaring river that is still unparalleled in Tirakan.
The Duigoshz have developed this environment by building unique dwellings. These dwellings could be described as a combination of tower and shaft, they are cylinders of stone blocks that go as far into the earth as they rise into the sky. Due to their round shape, they offer little resistance to incoming water masses. The half of the tower that lies in the ground is usually flooded with groundwater and serves as a well and as a firm foundation. The Duigoshz live in the upper half. These buildings are spread all over the country and there are no other buildings, villages or towns. At most, there are groups of nearby buildings connected by rope bridges. Mostly this has to do with the fact that the Duigoshz in these houses are close to each other, i.e. related or friends.
Like their neighbours, the Xordai, the Duigoshz are quite small, but much narrower and lighter. They also rarely wear those imposing beards like the Dwarves. What further distinguishes the Duigoshz from the Dwarves is their very long eyebrow hair, which in some of them is half a cubit long. Nevertheless, these and their head hair are only very thin and light and of a very light blond, almost white colour. Their face, indeed their whole skin, seems coarse in comparison. It is not dark, but it is of a healthy colouring.
What all Duigoshz have in common is their great thirst for knowledge and a sharp mind. They are the best informed about what is happening on Tirakan because they study their environment in great detail and travel often. There are many scientists and also traders among them. An important trade route runs through their country, which has, among other things, the only passable bridge that crosses the great, raging river that divides the country into its northern and southern halves. This is the way the Duigoshz get most of their food, because only a very limited number of crops thrive on their muddy slopes. Livestock farming is almost impossible. The river also contains very few hard-to-catch fish. So the only food on the table is what is imported from neighbouring Xordai and Fraxut: Mountain roots, highland vegetables, goat meat or cheese. Although very different from the Xordai, the culture of the Duigoshz is so closely tied to the culture of the Xordai that one can almost speak of a dependency.
The Duigoshz have a particularly friendly relationship with the neighbouring Xordai people. Not only do the Xordai provide the Duigoshz with food. The quarry stones for repairing and rebuilding the residential towers also come from the Xordai mountains. In return, the Xordai benefit from the knowledge of the Duigoshz. They cultivate more productive food crops, guide the construction of deeper shafts and more effective blast furnaces, they produce medicine, glasses and binoculars...
Also, the ruler and every holder of power of the Xordai has at least one gnomish advisor.
The Duigoshz do not have a king, instead there are some administrative apperats who keep order and solve legal cases. These ministers and officials do not feel superior to the mass of other Duigoshz, but only do their duty as responsible persons.
The partnership in Duigoshz is handled similarly to Humans. The two partners agree to stay together until all the children they will have have grown up. This agreement is made without oath or invocation of a higher power, as Duigoshz are rarely religious. If it is broken, the worst punishment known to the Duigoshz will be imposed on the couple: The declaration of immaturity. From now on, none of these two will be taken seriously, their promises will be considered worthless and they themselves will only be laughed at. Their words count for nothing. Failure to keep an agreement is considered by the Duigoshz to be one of the worst offences, since it is through duty and cooperation that Duigoshz society is maintained. However, this should not lead to the assumption that the Duigoshz are by their nature dutiful and upright. Anyone who gets involved with one of their traders will soon be taught better. No, the Duigoshz only have this honesty among themselves, it is strictly instilled in them from an early age, only others who do not possess their superior intellect are mercilessly taken to the cleaners.
Since there are no other buildings than their residential towers, these also serve as workplaces for the Duigoshz. A residential tower usually has five floors: the lowest, which is directly above the well shaft, serves as a food store, the second as a reception and sitting room, the third as a dining room and kitchen, the fourth as a bedroom and the fifth as a study. Typically, the latter also has a lushly planted balcony, after all, hardly any of the Duigoshz want to tend their flowers on a muddy slope. Yet another thing is present in almost every residential tower: The trumpet organ. This instrument, which only exists among the Duigoshz, differs from the organs of other peoples by the flower-like widening of its pipes. After each working day, the Duigoshz play it for hours until late in the evening. Thus, if you are looking for a place to stay in the dark of night in the land of the Duigoshz, all you have to do is listen for a distant trumpet and then follow it.