Ingzan crowning chant ceremony

"Eezzi-kah mokiyo-kah sayaron mokayaran, tuziste aaste, hayaman dattoriga!"

- A link from the chant

The Ingzan crowning chant ceremony was an incredibly ancient Ingzan religious ceremony in which after a new sovereign was crowned some Ingzan monks would circle the sovereign and sing chants, these chants were in Ancient Ingzan and was sung rather fast to background music provided by drums and other percussion instruments. These chants were asking the goddess V'ei'ka to recognise the new sovereign as a monarch and provide the right to rule accordingly.

The ceremony had been traced by to the start of Ingzan civilisation in around 40,000 BBY and the original ceremonies ran to around 33,092 BBY. 300 years later after becoming extinct the ceremony was revived again and was used ever since.