Education
Joining the Diplomatic Service, Goulden studied Turkish at London University and served in Ankara from 1963-1967.
Joining the Diplomatic Service, Goulden studied Turkish at London University and served in Ankara from 1963-1967.
He spent three years as a Second Secretary on the Hungary/Romania/Czechoslovakia desk in the Foreign Office from 1967-1969, before spending 18 months in Manila. From 1971-1974 he was in the Planning Staff in the Foreign Office. From 1974-1976 he ran the Foreign Office"s recruitment programme, taking off a month in 1974 to join the Geneva negotiations on Cyprus.
He was Head of Chancery in Dublin from 1976-1979, returning to be Assistant Head of Defence Department responsible for North Atlantic Treaty Organization affairs from 1979-1981.
From there he was promoted to become Head of Personnel Services Department and later Head of News Department and Foreign and Commonwealth Office Spokesman from 1982-1984. Between 1984-1987 he served as Head of Chancery at the United Kingdom Representation to the European Communities in Brussels, returning to London as Assistant Under-Secretary of State (Defence) at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office from 1988-1992.
From 1992-1995 he was Ambassador in Ankara. He took up post as the United Kingdom Permanent Representative to the North Atlantic Council and to the Western European Union on 3 April 1995.
After retiring from the Diplomatic Service, Goulden began to pursue his interest in the revolution in musical performance during the early nineteenth century and the role in this of the conductor and composer Michael Costa.
He was awarded a Doctor of Philosophy degree in musicology by Durham University in 2012. His Doctor of Philosophy thesis was Michael Costa, England"s First Conductor: The Revolution in Musical Performance in England, 1830–1880 and his book with the same title was published in 2015. Lady (Diana) Goulden studied theatre at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama.
Subsequently he was a member of the Security Commission.