## [[Goré-Goré]]
The Goré-Goré is a [[native Ibiri]] ethnicity that lost their culture due to enslavement and [[Lucian]] subjugation during the [[Reign of Terror]]. Most [[Goré-Goré]] are [[Human]] and have dark straight hair, with a skin tone between tan and amber.
Before the [[Goré-Goré Renaissance]], the [[Goré-Goré]] people was mostly a collection of families that escaped slavery or were liberated after the [[Reign of Terror]] in the areas surrounding [[Goodwheat]] and [[Wolf Wood]], and they were pejoratively called [[Goré-Goré|Wolfwood Beggars]].
The [[Goré-Goré]] culture had a revival with the famed [[quilombola]] bard [[Gilberto Ojuara]]. The bard was travelling the countryside when he was attacked by [[Lucian]] loyalists. The [[Lucian|Lucians]] were fought back by [[Goré-Goré]] hunters and the bard was taken to their village of [[Itaiuba]] to receive medical care. As [[Gilberto Ojuara]] recovered, he used powerful bardic spells to peer into the history of his saviors, and through them helped them recover some of their ancient ceramic arts. The event is celebrated in the yearly [[Ojuara Festival]] in [[Itaiuba]].
News of the recovery of the [[Goré-Goré]] ceramics culture was spread through [[Fortuna]] as [[Gilberto Ojuara]] continued traveling the colony and telling people of his saviors. This led to [[Royal Court of Fortuna]] recognizing the [[Goré-Goré]] ethnicity and establishing [[Itaiuba]] as a [[native settlement]]. The [[Goré-Goré]] became a symbol of the fight for preserving indigenous cultures, and their ceramics would be in high demand throughout the colony.
# Religion
Unlike many other [[native Ibiri]], the Goré-Goré worship the [[Church of Sol]], with a strong veneration for [[Ibiri Legends]] as well.
# Organization
The [[Goré-Goré]] don't have a centralized leadership and usually assimilate within [[Settler]] communities. Settlements that are dominantly [[Goré-Goré]] each have their own way of defining leadership. The village of [[Itaiuba]], for example, used to have a chieftain until recently, when they adopted mayor elections inspired by [[Settler]] villages.