The Chronicle recounts the following incidents: At the request of
Saint James who appears to him in dream, Charlemagne embarks on four wars to wrest
Spain from the
Saracens. In the first war, he takes his army to
Santiago de Compostela and conquers all of Spain. A second war is brought on to battle the African king
Agolant who, briefly, reconquers the country. (During this war, several miracles occur, including flowers sprouting from the lances of the knights.) A third war has Agolant invading south-western France and besieging the city of
Agen, but he is forced to retreat to
Pamplona. In the fourth war, Charlemagne's great army besieges Pamplona. After the death of Agolant, Charlemagne's troops pursue the Saracens through Spain. In a story modeled on
David and Goliath,
Roland battles the
Saracen giant Ferracutus, who is holding the city of
Nájera. They fight for two days, taking truces to rest at night, but during the second night the courteous Roland places a stone beneath the head of the giant as a pillow, and upon waking the giant reveals to Roland that he is only vulnerable in one spot: his navel. In the subsequent battle, Roland's sword finds the spot and the giant is killed. Once the last Saracen leaders are defeated, Charlemagne invests Santiago de Compostela with considerable powers and begins the return to France. The chronicle then tells the
Song of Roland material: at the
battle of Roncevaux Pass, Charlemagne's rearguard, which includes Roland, is ambushed by the troops of brothers
Marsile and
Baligant, kings of
Zaragoza, who have bought the aid of the traitor
Ganelon. Roland kills Marsile, but is mortally wounded and blows his horn to recall Charlemagne's army. After routing the Saracens, Charlemagne oversees the trial and execution of Ganelon, and the heroes' bodies are brought back to France. Charlemagne invests
Basilique Saint-Denis with considerable prerogatives and dies. The chronicle ends with several appendices, including the purported discovery of Turpin's tomb by Pope Calixtus II and Callixtus' call to
crusade. ==Publication history==