Edward John Gwynn (1868–1941), the second son of the Very Reverend Dr
John Gwynn D.D. and Lucy Josephine O'Brien, was born at Aughnagaddy in
Ramelton,
County Donegal, in 1868. His father was the Rector of Tullyaughnish (or Ramelton). As a teenager, he attended
St Columba's College, Rathfarnham, where his father had earlier been headmaster. In 1885, after completing his secondary education, Gwynn attended
Trinity College Dublin. His father was then Lecturer in Divinity at the college. In 1888, he won a scholarship in classics. Edward graduated with distinction, winning the large gold medal for classics as well as a gold medal for ethics and logic. In 1893, he was elected a Fellow of Trinity College. From Latin and Greek, Gwynn then turned his attention to Early Irish. His father had worked for years on the
Book of Armagh, an Irish text written in Latin; Edward made ancient texts in Irish his special field. At that time Irish studies did not form part of the range of subjects which were taught at Trinity College. However, Edward was able to commence his research under the aegis of the
Royal Irish Academy, of which he was elected a member in 1896. Two years later, he became its Professor of Celtic Languages. As an efficient administrator as well as a serious scholar he was to remain a key figure in the affairs of the Academy for the rest of his working life. He served as President of the Academy for the period 1934 to 1937. After Edward Gwynn's death, a colleague recalled not only his keen intellect but also "that well-known smile, so full of mellow wisdom, infinite kindness and quietly amused tolerance of the foibles and extravagances of smaller minds". ==Family==