William Wilde was born at Kilkeevin, near
Castlerea, in
County Roscommon, the youngest of the three sons and two daughters of a prominent local medical practitioner, Thomas Wills Wilde, and his wife, Amelia Flynne (d. c.1844). His family were members of the
Church of Ireland. He was descended from a Dutchman, Colonel de Wilde, who went to Ireland with
King William of Orange's
invasion army in 1690, and numerous
Anglo-Irish ancestors. He received his initial education at the Elphin Diocesan School in
Elphin, County Roscommon. In 1832, Wilde was bound as an apprentice to
Abraham Colles, the pre-eminent Irish surgeon of the day, at Dr Steevens' Hospital in
Dublin. He was also taught by the surgeons James Cusack and
Sir Philip Crampton and the physician
Sir Henry Marsh. Wilde also studied at the private and highly respected school of anatomy, medicine, and surgery in Park Street (later Lincoln Place), Dublin. Among the places he visited on this tour was
Egypt. In a tomb, he found the mummified remains of a dwarf and salvaged the torso to bring back to Ireland. He also collected embalmed ibises. Once back in Ireland, Wilde published an article in the
Dublin University Magazine suggesting that one of the "
Cleopatra's Needles" be transported to England (eventually in 1878 one of the Needles was transported to London, and in 1880
the other one was brought to New York's Central Park). Wilde was a founder member of the
Irish nationalist Home Government Association, established by his Trinity College Dublin colleague
Isaac Butt as the precursor to the
Irish Parliamentary Party. ==Recognition==