Vulgate VI makes them the king’s daughters, and Amans in the Vulgate is probably Aniause in Malory, but Malory makes the relationship less clear. Vulgate’s version is probably more coherent.
Amans entrusted all his land and men to the elder of his daughters, but she proved a bad ruler. So Amans expelled her and put the younger daughter in charge. As soon as Amans died, the elder daughter went to war against the younger and succeeded in gaining most of the property.
When Sir Bors, on the Grail Quest, came to the younger sister’s last remaining castle, he found the lady, although young and beautiful, poorly dressed. She prepared an elaborate meal for him; he ate only bread and water. She gave him the best chamber and a fine bed; he slept on the floor, but rumpled the bed to appear as if he had slept in it, out of regard for her feelings. In her castle, he had symbolic dreams which indicated the choices he should make the following day in Grail tests.
He listened to the debate of the two sisters, declared that the younger seemed to be in the right, championed her caust against the older sister’s champion, Priadan le Noir, and won.
In the context of the spiritual allegory of the Grail Quest, King Amans symbolized Christ, the elder sister the Old Covenant, and the younger sister Holy Church, dressed in mourning for the sins of evil-doers. Amans and his daughters seem also to have had their own flesh-and-blood existence, independently of the allegory.
See also
Amans’ Land | The Legend of King Arthur