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Map of Belgium today. The village of Dhuy still exists five miles north of Namur.
The village of Dhuy is to the right of the red star.

The village of Ernage is to the right of the red star.

"The ninth day of the month of March [1818] in the Parish
Church of Ernage there
was baptized by myself, the parish priest of the said church, Jean
Joseph, born
the day before, natural and legitimate son of Pierre Joseph Dhuy, day
laborer,
present, and of Anne Marie Romain, both born and dwelling in this
parish."
--Ernage [Belgium] Parish Church
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The Catholic parish church of No one of the surname Dhuy (Photographed by Harris |
A Dhuy tombstone in the Ernage parish cemetery. (Photographed by Harris Dhuey in 1978.)

Jean Joseph Dhuy's former home in Ernage is the third of these
three buildings,
seen in 1940 after wartime bombings. The right side of the house
itself
was actually a barn, a typical arrangement in Belgian villages.
An aerial view of the village of Ernage, Belgium, located in the
center of this photograph.
Running along the east, from the northwest to southeast, is the
national highway connecting
the capital of Brussels to the provincial capital of Namur. Running
along its west is the rail
line connecting the same cities. The highway at the bottom right,
running from southwest
to northeast, was built during the time of the Roman Empire.
At the upper left is part of the commune of Chastre, where
descendants of Jean Joseph
Dhuy's brother Isidore Joseph live today. Between the two, unmarked,
lies the boundary
line between the provinces of Brabant and Namur.
On the road to the village of Dhuy in the commune of Eghezee, province of Namur, Belgium. (Photographed by Harris Dhuey in 1978.)