The
Gesta is the earliest surviving work devoted exclusively to Dagobert I. Written in
Latin, it combines deeds from the life of Dagobert with numerous accounts of miracles to present Dagobert as a saint and the founder of Saint-Denis. Its sources include the
Chronicle of Fredegar,
Gregory of Tours's
Historia Francorum, the
Liber historiae Francorum and various
saint's lives and passion narratives, including a
Life of
Arnulf of Metz. The author also had access to the archives of Saint-Denis, which included some charters issued by Dagobert. Dagobert I belonged to the
Merovingian dynasty. The first line of the
Gesta refers to his father,
Chlothar II, as the fourth in the line of Christian kings. The author of the
Gesta sought, however, to link Dagobert also to the
Carolingian dynasty reigning in the 830s. He gave his mother the name Bertrada, which was also the name of
Charlemagne's mother, and claimed he had been educated by
Arnulf of Metz, one of the earliest ancestors of the Carolingians. Nevertheless, there is reason to believe that the author was subtly criticizing the Carolingians. The
Gesta is written rather as a
speculum regum, "mirror for kings", a clear presentation of how a virtuous and godly king ought to act, implying perhaps that contemporary kings needed some correction. Hincmar is known later to have heavily criticized
Charles Martel, one of the most illustrious Carolingians. made for Saint-Denis around 1350. The story originates in the
Gesta. The
Gesta attributes several miracles to Saint
Denis to explain Dagobert's devotion to the saint and his shrine. One day, while Dagobert was still just a prince, he was chasing a stag when the animal ran into a shrine of the saint. When the hunters and dogs attempted to pursue it, they were rendered unable to move. Dagobert realized Denis's protective power. Later, after he angered his father by insulting Duke Sadragesilus of Aquitaine, he fled to a shrine contain relics of Denis and his companions. There he saw Denis in a dream and promised to build a new shrine for his tomb. The author of the
Gesta specifies many gifts Dagobert made to Saint-Denis, some with such specificity that he presumably had actual charters from the archives in front of him. These include a tribute of one hundred cows annually from
Le Mans. Dagobert also remembered Saint-Denis in his will, of which four copies were made for
Laon,
Metz, the royal treasury and Saint-Denis. On his deathbed, he had his son,
Clovis II, sign a document promising to respect Dagobert's gifts to Saint-Denis. He was buried beside the altar in the abbey church. The
Gesta is well known for its account of Dagobert's demise. At the time of Dagobert's death, Bishop
Ansoald of Poitiers was travelling on a diplomatic mission when he stopped in
Sicily to meet a famous hermit named John. The hermit informed him that, on the very day of Dagobert's death and while he was praying for the king's soul, he had a vision of the king being escorted by black-coloured demons in a boat towards one of the active volcanoes in the
Aeolian Islands. The king, however, called out to the saints to whom he had been generous all his life—Denis,
Martin and
Maurice—who appeared out of thunder and lightning to rescue Dagobert, taking him with them to the
Bosom of Abraham. The story of Dagobert's postmortem rescue probably owes something to the account in
Gregory the Great's
Dialogues of a hermit on
Lipari who saw
Theoderic the Great thrown into a volcano that led to
Hell. ==Usage==