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Strongest Castle/(s)? When it comes to lasting a heavy siege?


Wavey Sauce

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Which castle, or castles ranked, are best designed to withstand a heavy siege?



Or if you had your own garrison and were forced to pick a castle to defend, with your life on the line what would you pick?



There isnt too many castles that are really described as "weak". Other than Deepwood Motte I cant really think of many examples of castles that arent super loaded, so kind of hard to say because there is numerous that are said to be very strong.



I was thinking the Dread Fort. Has a strong design and once lasted for 2 years against a siege from the Starks.



Then again I know Winterfell was described as being able to hold off 10k men with just 500 men. Storms End as well has been detailed to be close to impossible to get into.



So if you had food/supplies that would last a few years what would you pick that gives you the most safety and best chance of surviving?


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Probably Casterly Rock. The way it is described in TWOIAF it seems more like a hollowed out mountain than a castle, with rich gold mines inside it to boot. It is basically the Lonely Mountain from the Hobbit.


The Lannisters are lucky that ASOIAF dragons don't care about treasures.



None of the typical medieval siege weapons like towers, trebuchets or sappers would do anything to it at all. So the enemy would have to try to batter their way throughout the entire mountain with rams. Good luck with that.


http://i.picpar.com/To9.jpg



If the situation starts getting really dire you can try to use your gold to bribe the enemy army into leaving.


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Other than that I'd go with the Eyrie.

possibly Casterly Rock not enough info about it.

I'd say Casterly Rock actually... It has never been taken, and it seems to have much larger food stores than the Eyrie could ever hope to stack up. If not counting food supplies, I'd say the Eyrie tho.

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While there are much more desirable locals, I think that if you were able to get past the Blood Gate, the second gates name escapes me at this time, The Erie would be a safe bet.


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Definitely not the Eyrie. It's nigh-impenetrable to assault, but comically easy to lay siege to (that narrow path works both ways, and it's extremely isolated). Which was how 95% of castles were taken anyway.


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Sandstone.



Out in the middle of the Dornish desert, fortified around the only well for fifty leagues in the deep sand dunes and far from the river Vaith. See how long armies will tolerate the heat, the scorpions and the guerilla attacks.


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I guess in the situation I gave the Eyrie is a good bet. But overall in other situations they have a bad layout because they end up stuck in as well and have no real way of getting trade supplies or paths to get outside help and outside plans


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Unless someone desperately wanted something or someone inside a castle, they were usually just ignored. Cities were the major targets of sieges, no real point in scrounging the countryside to clear-out every castle.


Especially castles as remote as the Eyrie or Storm's End provide no strategic value


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Casterly Rock. With all the advantage mentioned above, it is also extremely wide - more than 10 km wide. To even lay a siege to it, you have to have an absolutely ridiculous army, and a fleet as well.


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Sandstone.

Out in the middle of the Dornish desert, fortified around the only well for fifty leagues in the deep sand dunes and far from the river Vaith. See how long armies will tolerate the heat, the scorpions and the guerilla attacks.

Is there any information on Sand Stone? As far as how successful they were when it came to past sieges? Or how well it did and how long it lasted etc

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Harrenhall if it's repaird and you have enough people would be a good one.

Smart man. I forgot about that.

It was pretty much impossible to penetrate back in the day. It was just the dragons that ruined it, if not for Dragon fire, it would never have fallen to anyone

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Unless someone desperately wanted something or someone inside a castle, they were usually just ignored. Cities were the major targets of sieges, no real point in scrounging the countryside to clear-out every castle.

Especially castles as remote as the Eyrie or Storm's End provide no strategic value

Storms end holds tons of value.

As does the Eyrie because controlling that gives the add on support of the vale in general

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