The Collaborative International Dictionary
Temporality \Tem`po*ral"i*ty\, n.; pl. Temporalities. [L. temporalitas, in LL., possessions of the church: cf. F. temporalit['e].]
The state or quality of being temporary; -- opposed to perpetuity.
The laity; temporality. [Obs.]
--Sir T. More.-
That which pertains to temporal welfare; material interests; especially, the revenue of an ecclesiastic proceeding from lands, tenements, or lay fees, tithes, and the like; -- chiefly used in the plural.
Supreme head, . . . under God, of the spirituality and temporality of the same church.
--Fuller.
Wiktionary
n. 1 (plural of temporality English) 2 the temporal or worldly possessions of the clergy
Wikipedia
Temporalities are the secular properties and possessions of the Christian Church. It is most often used to describe those properties (a Stift or sticht in German or Dutch language) that were used to support a bishop or other religious person or establishment. Its opposite description would be the spiritualities.
In the Middle Ages, the temporalities were usually those lands that were held by a bishop, that were used to support him. After the Investiture Crisis was resolved, the temporalities of a diocese were usually granted to the bishop by the secular ruler after the bishop was consecrated. If within the Holy Roman Empire a bishop had gained secular overlordship to his temporalities imperially recognised as an imperial state then the temporalities were usually called Hochstift, or Erzstift (for an archbishop). Sometimes this granting of the temporalities could take some time. Sometimes a bishop elect gained his temporalities even before or without his papal confirmation by an imperial act called liege indult (Lehnsindult). The temporalities were often confiscated by secular rulers to punish bishops.
Usage examples of "temporalities".
There was very little information on the concrete layers used in everyday discourse, and the higher-level modulations all concerned the strange tenses and temporalities that they had discussed the day before.
As it had been all along, the higher-level modulations all incorporated strange tenses and conditional temporalities that seemed to confuse even Rilla and Virigu, it seemed.
Research into earlier temporalities and proto-temporalities was enlarging an understanding of the birth of the universe.
They were distant and isolated temporalities shrunken to toy constructions in the lonely waste of what seemed a desert—and was.