Palladas influenced the works of Theocharis Silvestros, Iakovos Moskos, Ioannis Kornaros and Philotheos Skoufos.
[7] According to records of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, he created a cross for the iconostasis (templo) in 1608.
The work was paid for by the people of Crete and recorded by the Dositheos II of Jerusalem.
In 1612, he painted a group of icons for Saint Catherine's Monastery in Mount Sinai Egypt, again they were specifically for the iconostasis (templo).
Famous Greek painter Andreas Pavias also taught reading, writing, and painting.
According to published documents, he completed the crosses for the church of Trimartiri and Saint Catherine of Sinai in Heraklion.
One of his contemporaries Theocharis Silvestros was contacted by the Patriarch Gerasimus I of Alexandria to create a cross resembling the work of Palladas.
[10] According to another record on October 14, 1639, Palladas painted a cross for the Basilica of the Nativity in Bethlehem.
[11] According to Nectarius, Palladas was a faithful monk affiliated with Saint Catherine's Monastery in Egypt.
On May 2, 1668, his student famous painter Papa-Savvas Negrini also requested to be buried next to his teacher at the outpost dependency Saint Catherine of Sinai in Heraklion.