v. [f. LOYAL a. + -IZE.] trans. To make loyal; to restore to faithful allegiance; also, to attach to the loyalist party.
1825. Syd. Smith, Sp., Wks. 1859, II. 206/1. My remedy for these evils is, to enter into an alliance with the Irish peopleto conciliate the clergy, to loyalise the laity.
1867. Pall Mall G., 7 Aug., 1. To pacify, loyalize, and content at once those who have land and those who desire it.
Hence Loyalized ppl. a.
1851. C. R. Edmonds, Milton, xvi. 224. The treacherous faction of loyalized presbyterians.