inthronizate

Etymology
From, past participle of.

Adjective

 * 1)  Placed upon a throne; enthroned.
 * 2) * c. 1470,, chapter xlix, Chronicle, page i; reprinted in John Hardyng; , Henry Ellis, editor, The Chronicle of Iohn Hardyng. Containing an Account of Public Transactions from the Earliest Period of English History to the Beginning of the Reign of King Edward the Fourth. Together with the Continuation by Richard Grafton, to the Thirty Fourth Year of King Henry the Eighth. The Former Part Collated with Two Manuscripts of the Author's own Time; the Last, with Grafton's Duplicate Edition. To which are Added a Biographical and Literary Preface, and an Index, London: Printed for F. C. and J. Rivington; T[homas] Payne; Wilkie and Robinson; Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown; Cadell and Davies; J. Mawman; and R. H. Evans, 1812, 931251127, page 85:
 * Maryus, his soonne, was then intronizate, / And sette on high in trone of maiestie, / With croune of golde full royally coronate, / As worthy was vnto his royalte;