An inventory of John Mabbe the younger's goldsmith stock in 1576 survives. After making a statute on the quality of gold sold in London,
Elizabeth I allowed him to market his existing stock of jewellery made with gold under 22 ct
fineness. His stock included jewels with the story of Joshua and Caleb, Charity, Hercules, Narcissus, Julius Caesar, a mermaid, the story of Mars, Venus and Cupid, Phoebus Apollo and Daphne, and the emblem
Fama Perennis. A gold tablet or locket with a "Roman burning his hand in fire" told the story of
Gaius Mucius Scaevola. There was a gold tortoise with a shell set with 39
topazes and a pendant emerald. He had 224 gold perfumed beads known as
pomander beads from the name of the scented compound.
Kim F. Hall notes the representation of Black Africans depicted on gold brooches in Mabbe's 1576 inventory, with cameos of a "Mores-head", a "Blackamoore", and a woman like a "More". ==References==