By the Kamakura period, public lands were owned by different landowners as private holdings (chigyo).
In Honduras, as in much of Central America, a large majority of the land was owned by large landowners or big corporations.
All land was owned by landowners - nobility, Church and monarchs.
Serfs at the time were owned by landowners and counted as taxable property.
In the nineteenth century, most land in Britain was owned by very few landowners.
The arable land available was usually owned by large landowners from the district center of Ula.
The earliest punts were privately owned by local landowners, and charged a toll.
An estimated 95 per cent of land in Papua New Guinea is owned and managed by customary landowners.
Unalienated land is owned under customary title by traditional landowners.
These wind farms are mainly owned by independent companies and landowners.