
Ceremonial arrowhead
Made of iron, shaped as a gourd, with silver overlay.
Group of mounted Indian arrows
Featuring various extremely rare arrows with crescent heads.
Rare Ottoman war arrow
With a small, barbed armor-piercing point and early style painted shaft.
Rare Korean war arrow
With a large double-edged tip and golden cresting.
Various Indian arrows
An assortment of Indian arrows with various heads.
Chinese target arrow
With snake skin nock. Probably made by Ju Yuan Hao in the 1950s.
Republican period whistle arrow
Dating from the revival period of Chinese archery in the 1930s.
Box of Javanese arrows
Used in a target archery sport that was originally practiced in the Keraton.
Three Indian war arrows
Fitted with facetted armor-piercing bodkins type arrowheads.
Two Indian flight arrows
Light and slender arrows with small metal tips, optimized for long-distance shooting.
Three Indian anti-siege arrows
Named so due to their extremely heavy, bullet-shaped arrowheads.
Five Indian arrows
From the same set, but with a variety of different arrowheads.
Eight Indian bodkin arrows
Fitted with strong, facetted armor-piercing heads.
Seven Indian broadhead arrows
With fairly large broadheads, painted tails and bulbous nocks.
An interesting Japanese yari
Signed Yasutsugu, with sayagaki referring to the Tokugawa family.
Two fine north Indian arrows
With points mimicking the shape of the Indian push dagger called "katar".
12 North Indian arrows
With katar-tipped heads and dark brown shafts.
A Sirdan, or Manchu war arrow
This large and imposing type of war arrow is often compared to a small spear.