Edward Wynne (baptised 25 February 1734 – 27 December 1784) was an English lawyer and scholar.
On his father's death in 1765, he inherited the estate of Little Chelsea in Kensington, London; he also owned the manor of Polsew at St Erme, near Truro in Cornwall.
His most important work was Eunomus, or, Dialogues Concerning the Law and Constitution of England (1768), an attempt to explain English legal principles and defend it against charges that it was only interesting to lawyers.
It reached its fifth edition in 1822, although it was overshadowed by William Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England.
[1] Wynne, who never married, died of cancer of the mouth, at his house in Little Chelsea, London, on 27 December 1784.