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GODIVA , a Saxon lady, who, according to theSee also: legend, rode naked through the streets of See also: Coventry to gain from her See also: husband a remission of the oppressive See also: toll imposed on his tenants
.
The See also: story is that she was the beautiful wife of See also: Leofric, See also: earl of See also: Mercia and See also: lord of Coventry
.
The See also: people of that city suffering grievously under the earl's oppressive See also: taxation, Lady Godiva appealed again and again to her husband, who obstinately refused to remit the tolls
.
At last, weary of her entreaties, he said he would See also: grant her
See also: request if she would ride naked through the streets of the See also: town
.
Lady Godiva took him at his word, and after issuing a proclamation that all persons should keep within doors or shut their windows, she rode through, clothed only in her long hair
.
One See also: person disobeyed her proclamation, a tailor, ever afterwards known as Peeping Tom
.
He bored a hole in his shutters that he might see Godiva pass, and is said to have been struck See also: blind
.
Her husband kept his word and abolished the obnoxious taxes
.
The See also: oldest See also: form of the legend makes Godiva pass through Coventry market from one end to the other when the people were assembled, attended only by two soldiers, her long hair down so that none saw her, " apparentibus cruribus tamer candidissimis." This version is given in See also: Flores historiarum by See also: Roger of See also: Wendover, who quoted from an earlier writer
.
The later story, with its See also: episode of Peeping Tom, has been evolved by later chroniclers
.
Whether the lady Godiva of this story is the Godiva or Godgifu of See also: history is undecided
.
That a lady of this name existed in the early See also: part of the I Ith century is certain, as evidenced by several See also: ancient documents, such as the See also: Stow charter, the Spalding charter and the Domesday survey, though the spelling of the name varies considerably
.
It would appear from See also: Liber Eliensis (end of 12th century) that she was a widow when Leofric married her in 1040
.
In or about that See also: year she aided in the founding of a monastery at Stow, See also: Lincolnshire
.
In 1043 she persuaded her husband to build and endow a See also: Benedictine monastery at Coventry
.
Her mark, "di Ego Godiva Comitissa See also: diu istud desideravi," was found on the charter given by her See also: brother, Thorold of Bucknall—sheriff of Lincolnshire—to the Benedictine monastery of Spalding in ro51; and she is commemorated as benefactress of other monasteries at See also: Leominster, See also: Chester, See also: Wenlock, See also: Worcester and See also: Evesham
.
She probably died a few years before the Domesday survey (1o85–Io86), and was buried in one of the porches of the abbey See also: church
.
See also: Dugdale (1656) says that a window, with representations of Leofric and Godiva, was placed in Trinity Church, Coventry, about the See also: time of See also: Richard II
.
The Godiva procession, a See also: commemoration of the legendary ride instituted on the 31st of May
1678 as part of Coventry See also: fair, was celebrated at intervals until 1826
.
From 1848 to 1887 it was revived, and recently further attempts have been made to popularize the See also: pageant
.
The wooden effigy of Peeping Tom which, since 1812, has looked out on the See also: world from a See also: house at the See also: north-west corner of Hertford Street, Coventry, represents a See also: man in See also: armour, and was probably an image of St See also: George
.
It was removed from another part of the town to its See also: present position
.
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