What went on during multi-year sieges?

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pretty much, yes. Set up camp, play loud music over the walls, send out parties to pillage and loot the surrounding countryside for supplies and to hunt for attempts at tunneling under your camp), if possible maybe rotate out part of your forces with fresh ones from home.
It's a game of chicken basically, who has the most patience and resources, with the besieged city hoping to get relieved, the besieging army hoping they don't run out of places to loot for supplies.

Upvote:1

The description of several sieges that I read suggests that their main activity was digging, building walls, ramps and later mines. You can see the ancient fortress of Masada in Israel, which is located on a mountain with almost vertical slopes. The fortress had very large supplies, sufficient for several years of siege. The Romans who besieged the fortress in 73 BC had to build a huge ramp reaching to the top of the mountain. The ramp and the remains of the Roman camp still exist. It was an enormous amount of work to build all this.

In several other sieges the besieging army diverted rivers to deprive the fortress of the water supply, etc. One part of the army was digging, and another part worked for food supply for those digging...

Upvote:5

Remember that frequently the objective of a siege was not to defeat the opponents troops, but to bottle them up, and prevent them from joining military action elsewhere. Military action is designed to achieve a strategic objective, not just to slaughter people. I think if you look at the English wars of the 12th century, or the English civil war you'll find some good examples.

During the Napoleonic war, the nobility of neighboring towns might come out and have a picnic to watch the bombardment as a form of entertainment. (Wish I could find the citation for that right now).

As far as the expense of keeping an army in the field, the beseiging army will seize what they want from the countryside, and may or may not pay troops at all - sometimes they'll let them pillage the town in the end, sometimes they'll promise pay and provide nothing, sometimes they'll demand service on behalf of some ideal, sometimes the war is a civil war, in which there are no neutrals (just enemies that I haven't prioritized yet), sometimes they'll just demand service by feudal right.

Unless you limit the question to a specific time period, there are a lot of variable.s

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