'Bhujimol' is the name of the most ancient form of the
Nepali script.
In
2003, a brick was discovered in
Kathmandu, in the course of reconstruction of the Dhando
Chaitya, bearing inscriptions in both
Brahmi and Bhujimol: The upper face is inscribed with ''Cha Ru Wa Ti'' in Brahmi, and with ''Cha Ru Wa Ti Dhande / He Tu Pra Bha'' in the Newari Bhujimol script. There are
Swastika marks at the two ends of the upper face with a
Chakra mark in between. The brick measures 35.5 cm x 23 cm x 7 cm and weighs 8.6 kg. The brick may date to as early as the
3rd century BC. The previously earliest known inscription in the Kathmandu valley dated to the
6th century, at the Changu Narayan in
Mandeva. The inscription is interpreted to refer to
Charumati, a daughter of king
Ashoka's.