There wasn't one, because there were no female squires; the notion of Women's Liberation was still several hundred years away.
The closest female equivalent (the personal assistant of a noble woman) would probably have been "lady-in-waiting".
The ceremony in which a squire becomes a knight is called a dubbing ceremony.
"The name of the Town Squire is Paul." "Sir Lancelot called to his squire to bring his armor."
squire
madam
A squire
Squire
Oh, dude, the female equivalent of "squire" is "squireess." It's like when you're playing medieval dress-up and you need a lady-in-waiting to carry your sword or whatever. So yeah, squireess is the technical term, but let's be real, who actually uses that in everyday conversation?
A squire.
There is no song called the " Stroke "
At first they were pages and then squires.
The name of the ceremony in which a squire is named a knight is called a dubbing ceremony. After the ceremony the knight has the title of 'Sir.'
A knights assistant is known as a squire.