It is uncertain whether this MP or his brother William was the older of the sons of Nicholas and Joan Temys, by whom the manor of Rood Ashton (in the west of the county near Trowbridge) was held in jointure from 1402.
Agnes was the grand-daughter of the former Salisbury MP John Levesham, from whom she inherited land in Old Sarum, two messuages and carucates called ‘Duldres’ and ‘Cormailys’ in Netheravon, and more buildings and land in Everley and Stratford sub Castle, in all worth some £3 p.a. While she was still a child her claim to inherit estates in Dorset (notably the manor of Duller in Lychet Matravers), through descent from her maternal grandmother, was successfully challenged by the Husseys, and these passed accordingly to Thomas Hussey I*.
The couple took up residence on the estate she had inherited at Netheravon, six miles north of Amesbury. In 1428 Temys sued a man from Hampshire for stealing a horse worth £5 there, and he was styled ‘of Netheravon, gentleman’ in a suit brought by Robert Onewyn II* for a debt of four marks in 1436.
The status of the Temys brothers among the gentry of Wiltshire had been indicated in 1434 when Thomas and William were required to take the oath against maintenance as administered in their county.
Afterwards, Temys had little to do with Salisbury, although he did participate in the next parliamentary elections, held in the city on 5 Feb. 1449. He made no contribution towards the loan of £66 demanded by the Crown in July that year, and after 2 Nov. he ceased attending convocations.
Little is recorded of Temys thereafter. The date of his wife’s death is not known, but like their son Robert (who died on 12 Sept. 1473), she predeceased him. In Michaelmas term 1473 Robert’s widow sued her father-in-law for a third part of the manor of Netheravon as her dower. The MP himself died on 16 Mar. 1475.
