In a castle siege, a lady in waiting might just wait. There were other approaches open, including fighting alongside the garrison.
There is link to a nice medieval picture of a lady in a besieged castle below.
One of the main tactics used during a siege is to cut off supplies to the occupants and destroy their crops, or to basically starve them out. After the siege, the castle would need to resupply. Part of their recovery would be to buy, barter, or sometimes even beg for new stock from the nearby markets and neighbors.
Those that had been stored.
People used a Siege in Medieval warfare times to capture the enemy. The attackers would surround the castle and let no one in, and let no one out. The Siege would end when the enemies surrendered due to them being starving and/or dehydrated.
What a queen did, when she was in a castle under siege, would have depended on the nature of the queen and whether the king was with her. Some queens would have commanded their garrisons. Some would have fought with the soldiers. Some would have left the whole thing to the men. There are a couple of links below to pictures of medieval women in combat.
One way to attack a castle was to surround it and lay siege to it, allowing no one in or out. The hope was that the people in the castle would eventually starve to the point they would give up. To prepare for this, a castle had a large store room full of food.
A castle helped protect the people from their enemies by providing a safe heaven, often for Royalty, where people would go for protection during times of war. The strong castle walls would often be accompanied by catapults, archers, and draw bridges to defend against attackers. Often castles would have courtyards where food could be grown and stored if sieges lasted a long time, often trying to outlast the invaders through attrition.
I would say out of spear pillar, castle siege, Pokemon stadium or bridge of eldin
As soon as the Lord or his Chatelain knew a large opposing army was going to surround them, they would gather all the food and soldiers in the castle and lock it up from inside.
It's a siege tactic. Those laying siege would tunnel to the castle walls and destroy their foundations from under the ground. It was much safer than using a battering ram.
siege? If an army lays siege to a castle then they are preventing the flow of goods from going into the structure. This would lead to the death of the people inside or their surrender. Are you looking for something more specific?
Macbeth believes the castle is impregnable and declares that it would be foolish for the enemy army to attempt to besiege it, as it would be like trying to breach an impenetrable fortress. He expresses confidence in the castle's defenses and dismisses any threat from the opposing army.
A keep is a strong central tower that is used as a dungeon or a fortress. Often, the keep is the most defended area of a castle, and as such may form the main habitation area, or contain important stores such as the armoury, food, and the main water well, which would ensure survival during a siege.