Land Rover Series
The Land Rover Series I, II, and III, or simply the Land-Rover are compact British off-road vehicles, produced by the Rover Company since 1948, and later by British Leyland. Inspired by the World War II jeep, it was the first mass-produced civilian four-wheel drive car with doors and an available hard roof. Unlike conventional cars and trucks of the time, it used a sturdy, fully box-welded frame. Furthermore, due to the post-war steel shortage and aluminium surplus, Land Rovers received aluminium alloy bodies that did not rust, thereby favouring their longevity. In 1992, Land Rover claimed that 70% of all the vehicles they had built were still in use.
Text adapted from “Land Rover series” on Wikipedia ↗ · CC BY-SA 4.0 ↗ · retrieved 2026-07
Other Land Rover models
- 1/2 ton Lightweight —
- Electric Defender —
- Freelander 2 —
- Range Rover (1st generation) —
- Range Rover (P38A) —
- Range Rover Evoque Convertible —
- Range Rover SV Coupé —
- Range Rover Sport Series III —
- Ranger Special Operations Vehicle —
- Series I —
- Series II/IIA —
- Series III —
- Series III Lightweight —
- 88 1956
- 109 1958
- RANGE ROVER 1960
- DISCOVERY 1961
- 110 1969
- DEFENDER 1972
- 90 1982
- 127 1989
- Freelander 1991
- RANGE ROVER SPORT 1996
- RANGE ROVER EVOQUE 2011
- Range Rover Velar 2016
- DISCOVRY 35TH ANNIV ED DMHEV A 2025