Bhujimol is the name of the most ancient form of the Nepal script. Nepal script ( Nepal Bhasa:नेपाल लिपि is a group of scripts that developed from Brahmi script and are used primarily in Nepal Bhasa. It is used to write Nepal Bhasa.
The word "Bhujimol" comes from Nepalbhasa words "bhuji" meaning housefly and "mol" a word written at the end of scripts (eg-Litumol, Golmol).
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. Year 2003 ( MMIII) was a Common year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar. Kathmandu (काठमांडौ येँ is the Capital and the largest city of Nepal. A chaitya is a Buddhist or Jain shrine including a Stupa. In modern texts on Indian architecture the term chaitya-griha is often used There are Swastika marks at the two ends of the upper face with a Chakra mark in between. The swastika (from Sanskrit: svástika sa स्वस्तिक Hindu IS CORRECT if 'ि' is positioned incorrectly see -->) is Chakra ( Pali: chakka Tibetan: khorlo Malay: cakera is a Sanskrit term meaning Circle or Wheel 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 3rd century BC started the first day of 300 BC and ended the last day of 201 BC The previously earliest known inscription in the Kathmandu valley dated to the 6th century, at the Changu Narayan in Mandeva. The 6th century is the period from 501 to 600 in accordance with the Julian calendar in the Christian / Common Era. The inscription is interpreted to refer to Charumati, a daughter of king Ashoka's. Charumati is an alleged daughter of King Ashoka. She married the prince of Deopatan. Ashoka ( Devanāgarī: अशोकः IAST: Aśokaḥ, aɕoːkə(hə Prakrit Imperial title Devanampriya Priyadarsi