The controversial scientific name
respublica of this species was given by
Charles Lucien Bonaparte,
Napoleon's nephew and a
republican idealist. The habit of zoologists at that time to dedicate newly discovered species to some king, queen, or aristocrat deeply irritated him. In order to assert his convictions, he chose to name this species
respublica to honour the republic and not the royalty.
Charles Lucien Bonaparte described the bird from a badly damaged trade specimen purchased by British ornithologist
Edward Wilson. In doing so, he beat
John Cassin, who wanted to name the bird in honour of Wilson, by several months. Thirteen years later, in 1863, the
German zoologist Heinrich Agathon Bernstein discovered the home grounds of the Wilson's bird-of-paradise on
Waigeo Island. ==Distribution==