Federated Learning (FL) has emerged as a promising approach for collaborative model training without sharing private data. However, privacy concerns regarding information exchanged during FL have received significant research attention. Gradient Inversion Attacks (GIAs) have been proposed to reconstruct the private data retained by local clients from the exchanged gradients. While recovering private data, the data dimensions and the model complexity increase, which thwart data reconstruction by GIAs. Existing methods adopt prior knowledge about private data to overcome those challenges. In this paper, we first observe that GIAs with gradients from a single iteration fail to reconstruct private data due to insufficient dimensions of leaked gradients, complex model architectures, and invalid gradient information. We investigate a Temporal Gradient Inversion Attack with a Robust Optimization framework, called TGIAs-RO, which recovers private data without any prior knowledge by leveraging multiple temporal gradients. To eliminate the negative impacts of outliers, e.g., invalid gradients for collaborative optimization, robust statistics are proposed. Theoretical guarantees on the recovery performance and robustness of TGIAs-RO against invalid gradients are also provided. Extensive empirical results on MNIST, CIFAR10, ImageNet and Reuters 21578 datasets show that the proposed TGIAs-RO with 10 temporal gradients improves reconstruction performance compared to state-of-the-art methods, even for large batch sizes (up to 128), complex models like ResNet18, and large datasets like ImageNet (224*224 pixels). Furthermore, the proposed attack method inspires further exploration of privacy-preserving methods in the context of FL.