The tombs of the élite in New Kingdom (1550-1070 BC) Thebes consisted of offering chapels with painted or carved scenes. The tomb owner was buried in a shaft in the rock below the chapel. In the succeeding Third Intermediate Period (about 1070-661 BC), the construction of such decorated tombs stopped, and decoration was instead concentrated on the items buried with the dead. A number of factors might have influenced this: dwindling financial resources, a desire for more security or a change in belief.Stelae, usually of stone, were included in tomb design from the beginning of Egyptian history. However, placing a wooden stela in a tomb was a new feature of this period. These stelae are usually brightly coloured, and some are very large. This example shows the owner, Nakhtefmut, accompanied by his daughter Shepeniset, adoring Re-Horakhty, the falcon-headed god of the horizon.