In a dungeon
it is a dunghen...
dungen
prison
sir Richard was a prisoner
The Elvenking ordered his men to lock away his prisoners,"The Dwarves", in different cells around the castle and to give them food and water and to be kept there until they say what they were doing in his forest.
it was kept in King hammurabi's castle
Dungeon
While in use a total of 12,123 Confederate soldiers were kept there.
no not all the time only if told by Jude
dunegon
priorety
A dungoen is a place where prisoners are kept. In the past, it used to double as the keep. In its original medieval usage, the dungeon was the keep, the main tower of a castle which formed the final defensive position the garrison could retreat to when outer fortifications were overcome. It was also a safe, if not comfortable, place to keep prisoners. Once more luxurious housing for the lord of the castle was constructed, the dungeon was used mainly for this purpose. Its meaning has evolved over time to also mean an underground prison or burial vault, typically built underneath a castle