ppl. a. Obs. Possessed of much land.
1601. Holland, Pliny, XVIII. iii. I. 550. Rich and substantiall men were tearmed in Latine, Locupletes, as one would say, Loci-pleni, [i. well-landed].
a. 1623. Camden, Rem., Armories (1636), 212. Ralph de Curva Spina or Creythorne, descended from an Ancestor well landed in Kent.