He was born in
Bucharest, into the
Ghica family, the son of Ioan Ghika (1873–1949) and Elena Metaxa (1870–1951), and great-great-grandson of
Grigore IV Ghica,
Prince of Wallachia. He started his secondary studies at the
Gheorghe Lazăr High School in Bucharest. In 1917, he left with his family for
Paris, completing his secondary studies at the
Lycée Louis-le-Grand in 1920. He then entered the
University of Paris (the Sorbonne) with a major in mathematics, graduating in 1922. In 1929, he obtained a
Ph.D. in mathematics from the Faculté des Sciences of the University of Paris, with thesis written under the direction of
Arnaud Denjoy. After completing his doctorate, Ghika returned to Romania. In November 1932 he became assistant professor in the Mathematics Department of the
University of Bucharest, working in the Function Theory section chaired by
Dimitrie Pompeiu. On February 7, 1935, he was promoted to associate professor, and in 1945 he was named Full Professor and chair of the newly founded Functional Analysis section. In 1935, Ghika was elected corresponding member of the Romania Academy of Sciences, being promoted to full member in 1938. In 1955 he became corresponding member of the
Romanian Academy, and was promoted to full membership on March 20, 1963. In 1949, at the founding of the
Institute of Mathematics of the Romanian Academy, he became the chair of the Functional Analysis section of that Institute, a position he held till his death. Ghika married Elisabeta Angelescu (daughter of one-time
Prime Minister Constantin Angelescu) on June 7, 1934. They had a son, Grigore (born November 7, 1936), who became a researcher at the in
Măgurele. In March, 2007, the heirs of the Ghika and Angelescu families won back their rights to , in Bucharest. ==Legacy==