Baroja was the youngest child of
Serafin Baroja, a
Basque writer and poet who made his living as a mining engineer, and Carmen Nessi y Goñia, a woman of
Basque and
Italian descent. At the time of her birth, her father was editing
Bai, Juana, Bai, the first (
Basque-
Castilian) bilingual periodical to be published in
Pamplona. When it closed down after six issues, her father went back to his profession as a mining engineer and took the family to
Burjassot near
València,
Cestona in
Guipúzcoa, and
San Sebastián. In 1894, her family moved to
Madrid to help her aunt, Juana Nessi, in her bakery, Viena Capellanes, after the death of her husband, Matías Lacasa. Her early education was at
Catholic girls' schools, with private lessons in
French and music. Thanks to her father's love for theatre and music she regularly attended concerts and theatrical productions. At this time, both her brothers were gaining prominence on the cultural scene, with Ricardo becoming recognized as a painter and Pío having his first literary works published. Through them, she came into contact with artists, writers and intellectuals who were shaping the new cultural world of Spain. In 1902, she contracted
typhoid fever and her brother Pío recommended that she go to the
Monastery of El Paular in the
Sierra de Guadarrama. After fully recovering, she returned to
Madrid and despite her mother's opposition, she began to work with metals and enamels. In 1906, she went to
London and
Paris with Pío and studied art at the student residence of Jacqueline Paulhan, whose husband was the aviator
Louis Paulhan. When she returned to Madrid, she devoted herself entirely to her work as a goldsmith artisan making jewelry as well as a reputation for herself. ==Lyceum Club Femenino==