Guillaume d'Angleterre

Guillaume d'Angleterre is a 12th-century[1][2] epic poem in Old French, consisting of 3310 lines.

Meanwhile, Gratiiene, traveling with the merchants, meets a valiant knight called Gleolais.

The story now passes to the two children, called Lovel and Marin, who have been raised by two of the merchants, unaware that they're brothers.

The queen comes down from the castle to inspect their vessel and, upon seeing a ring he's wearing, realizes that he's her husband.

David Staines includes it in his The Complete Romances of Chrétien de Troyes, while Wendelin Förster includes it in his Christian von Troyes, Sämtliche erhaltene Werke (that is, the complete works of).

The relatively recently released Christine Ferlampin-Acher edition (2007, Champion classiques du moyen âge) uses the title Chrétien de Troyes (?)