James Goei has: Played House boy in "ITV Play of the Week" in 1955. Played Barman in "Boyd Q.C." in 1956. Played Waiter in "No Hiding Place" in 1959. Played Prince Serrakit in "The Avengers" in 1961. Played Chan in "Zero One" in 1962. Played Chinese Waiter in "Z Cars" in 1962. Played Chinese delegate in "HMS Paradise" in 1964.
Glen Goei has: Played Translator in "Lovejoy" in 1986. Played Francis in "Ruth Rendell Mysteries" in 1987. Played Cheng in "No Job for a Lady" in 1990. Played Dr. Frank Sunny in "Cracker" in 1993. Played Computer Executive in "Holding On" in 1997. Played Harold in "I Have Loved" in 2011.
Glen Goei was born in Singapore.
Jamison Scott Goei was born in November 1972.
The surname Goei is most likely to be either eastern (ie. Chinese) or Dutch. It is possible that the name spread through the travelling or moving of a bearer of the surname.
Seiro Ogino has: Performed in "Kin iro no koruda: Primo passo" in 2006. Played Untenshu Taxi in "Blue Drop: Tenshi tachi no gikyoku" in 2007. Played Aite Team Senshu in "Clannad: After Story" in 2008. Played Chonin in "Yozakura karutetto" in 2008. Performed in "Yozakura karutetto" in 2008. Played Benriya in "Kanamemo" in 2009. Played Tribal End in "Kurokami: The Animation" in 2009. Played Goei in "Phantom: Requiem for the Phantom" in 2009. Played Tenshu in "Kurokami: The Animation" in 2009. Played Palace Guard B in "Gekijouban Bureiku bureido Daiisshou: Kakusei no koku" in 2010. Played Doon Furuya in "Sankarea" in 2012. Played Dennis Eibringer in "Shingeki no Kyojin" in 2013.
Jin Domon has: Played Operator in "Buru Jenda" in 1999. Played Additional Voices in "Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty" in 2001. Played Hikaru Ichibanboshi in "Green Green Thirteen: Erolutions" in 2004. Played Nitro Convoy in "Transformers: Galaxy Force" in 2005. Played Merry in "One Piece Jidaigeki Special: Luffy Oyabun Torimonocho" in 2006. Played Hashiriya in "Devil May Cry" in 2007. Played Sadaji Wakui in "Hitohira" in 2007. Played Radio in "Blue Drop: Tenshi tachi no gikyoku" in 2007. Performed in "Clannad: After Story" in 2008. Played Shain in "Clannad: After Story" in 2008. Played Goei in "Phantom: Requiem for the Phantom" in 2009.
The cast of I Have Loved - 2011 includes: Amarin Cholvibul as Amarin Glen Goei as Harold Eryn Tett as Marie
Jun Konno has: Played Kouhei Fujita in "Kaosu heddo" in 2008. Performed in "Bus Gamer" in 2008. Played Mauru in "Toraburu" in 2008. Played Bijutsu Kyoshi in "Toraburu" in 2008. Played Heishi A in "Hagane no renkinjutsushi" in 2009. Played Kaimonokyaku in "Phantom: Requiem for the Phantom" in 2009. Played Street Guy A in "Kobato." in 2009. Played Danshi Seito in "To Love-ru OVA: Rito, onna ni naru" in 2009. Played Uchujin in "Kanamemo" in 2009. Played Additional Voices in "Kobato." in 2009. Played Heishi in "Hagane no renkinjutsushi" in 2009. Played Bunshichiro in "Sengoku basara" in 2009. Played Goei in "Phantom: Requiem for the Phantom" in 2009. Played Kenpei A in "Hagane no renkinjutsushi" in 2009. Played Elderly Jogger in "Kobato." in 2009. Played Otaku C in "Higurashi no naku koro ni Rei: Hajisarashi hen" in 2009. Played Geinin in "To Love-ru OVA: Rito to Mikan" in 2009.
"Goeiedag" is pronounced as "goo-ee-dahkh" in Dutch. It translates to "good day" in English and is commonly used as a greeting. The word is a combination of "goei," meaning good, and "dag," meaning day.
The cast of Spaghetti vs Noodles - 2005 includes: Lian Goei as Lin Cazzy Golomb as Julia Natalie Hsieh as Delivery girl Len Mazzeo as Don Christopher Tai as Ro
The cast of HMS Paradise - 1964 includes: Michael Arden as CPO Hawkins June Barry as Doris Barbara Bermel as Wren Wilkinson Martine Beswick as 5th Wren Eunice Black as Miss Franklin John Bluthal as Gus Paul Bogdan as Russian Admiral Janet Bradbury as 6th Wren Edward Brooks as Lieutenant Gibson Ray Browne as Naval Provost Lieutenant Richard Caldicot as Captain Turvey Ernest Clark as Commander Trickett Headley Colson as Det. Insp. Hogg Pat Coombs as Mrs. Wigg Graham Crowden as Commander Shaw Robert Dorning as Charlesworth Archie Duncan as Commander Bellamy Clive Dunn as Tug Boat Captain James Goei as Chinese delegate Cameron Hall as Admiral David Harford as Rating Barry Henderson as AB Henderson Donald Hewlett as Commander Brent Arthur Hewlett as Mr. Bassett Geoffrey Hibbert as Mr. Busby Barbara Hicks as FO Purseglove Robin Hunter as Lieutenant Pouter Jacqueline Jones as WPO Bond Gertan Klauber as Native chief Hugh Latimer as Polegate Angus Lennie as Able Seaman Murdoch Kenneth Midwood as Admiral Priscilla Morgan as Amanda Cerry Neal as 4th Wren Edmund Otero as Cuban delegate Brian Oulton as Surgeon Lt. Tibby Dickie Owen as Sid Ambrosine Phillpotts as Mrs. Turvey Victor Platt as Crabbe Ronald Radd as CPO Banyard Brian Rawlinson as A.B. Simkins Wendy Richard as Genevieve Joe Ritchie as AB Fletcher Cardew Robinson as Cousin Albert John Roden as Wilson Frank Seton as Rating Frank Thornton as Commander Fairweather George Tovey as Milkman Patrick Troughton as Capt. Ahab Rudlow Stanley Unwin as Professor John Warner as Mr. Turnbull Lionel Wheeler as Rating Alister Williamson as Mr. Higgins Sheree Winton as 3rd Wren Sheree Winton as Fiona
== == I will not comment on China, but since the Chinese had chariots for many years after 2637 BCE, it would suggest that the Chinese cavalry of the time was, at best, chariotry and, at worst, did not exist at that time. In the Mediterranean/Mesopotamian world, chariots dominated the battlefield until circa the 9th century BCE. There are Assyrian reliefs from this time depicting two riders, with one holding the other's reins while the other uses a bow. Chariots were in use simultaneously with this sort of cavalry. Archaeological discoveries in India, Persia, Assyria and Egypt show that in the polished stone age quaternary man had domesticated the horse, while a Chinese treatise, the Goei-leaotse, the fifth book of the Veuking, a sort of military code dating from the reign of the emperor Hoang-Ti (2637 years B.C.), places the cavalry on the wings of the army. In early times they stayed behind the infantry until the the other army was routed, insted of having your infantry chase the enemy, you sent in your horse cav. I believe the Mongols were the first to develop the light cavalry that used bows which made them very deadly. Then the Parthian Empire brought about the heavy armored cavalry which began the days of sending your horse cav in first because ground troops had difficulty dealing with the heavy armored horse, and worse, the heavy armored elephant.