Jacqueville

Jacqueville (French pronunciation: [ʒakvil]) is a coastal town in southern Ivory Coast.

Jacqueville is so named because it was the first place in Ivory Coast where the Union Jack was raised when the British originally occupied the country.

[2] Jacqueville is virtually an island, separated from most of the country by the Ébrié Lagoon, its other shore being on the Gulf of Guinea.

Until March 2015, when a 776-metre bridge was opened, the only way to reach the island involved taking a ferry across the lagoon.

[3] Jacqueville is noteworthy for the local pineapples ("ananas sauvage"), which are long narrow and have completely white and very sweet flesh.