[3] Pallas was one of the 50 sons of the impious King Lycaon[4] either by the naiad Cyllene,[5] Nonacris[6] or by unknown woman.
He had a daughter, Chryse who married Dardanus and brought the Palladium to Troy.
[7] Stone statues of Pallas and his grandson Evander[8] were extant in Pallantium in Pausanias' times.
[9] Roman authors used Pallas' name to provide an etiology for the name of the hill Palatium.
Pallas was killed, along with his brothers and their father, by a lightning bolt of the god.