The Tri Tepusan inscription is an inscription discovered in Kedu Plain, Temanggung Regency, Central Java, Indonesia, dated from 842 CE. This inscription is linked with the Borobudur Buddhist monument.
The inscription mentioned the sima (tax-free) lands in Tri Tepusan village awarded by ÃÂrë Kahulunnan (Pramodhawardhani) to ensure the funding and maintenance of a Kamà «lÃÂn called Bhà «misambhÃÂra. Kamà «lÃÂn itself from the word mula which means 'the place of origin', a sacred building to honor the ancestors, probably the ancestors of the Sailendras. Casparis suggested that Bhà «mi SambhÃÂra BhudhÃÂra which in Sanskrit means "The mountain of combined virtues of the ten stages of Boddhisattvahood", was the original name of Borobudur.