Timoji met
Vasco da Gama's fleet off Anjediva in 1498, but the Portuguese admiral suspected him of being a spy and refused his advances. In 1505, he attracted the Portuguese Viceroy
Dom Francisco de Almeida to an estuary and, after keeping him waiting for three days, appeared before him richly attired and offered him his services and a token tribute. In 1507 Timoji warned the Viceroy of the upcoming
siege of Cannanore by
Calicut forces and supplied the Portuguese
St. Angelo Fort during the siege. In the end of 1507, when a
Mamluk fleet under
Amir Husain Al-Kurdi (named "Mirocem" by the Portuguese) supplemented the Calicut forces, he became de Almeida's main informant. Soon after the
Battle of Diu, Timoji met the Vijayanagara emperor
Krishnadevaraya and offered him rich tribute. He then prompted the Portuguese to conquer
Goa, the main port for the horse trade. The city had been conquered from Vijayanagar by the Bahmani Sultans in 1469, and passed to Bijapur. In late 1509, the remains of the Mamluk fleet defeated in the battle of Diu had taken refuge there. In 1510 the new governor
Afonso de Albuquerque wanted to fight the
Egyptian Mamluk Sultanate fleet in the Red Sea or return to Hormuz. However, Timoji convinced him that it would be easier to fight them in
Goa, where they had sheltered after the Battle of Diu, and also of the illness of the Sultan
Yusuf Adil Shah and war between the
Deccan sultanates. On November, in a second strike, Albuquerque conquered Goa with a fleet fully renovated and about 300
Malabarese reinforcements from Cannanore. They regained the support of the native population, although frustrating the initial expectations of Timoji, who aspired to gain the city. Afonso de Albuquerque rewarded him by appointing him chief "
Aguazil" of the city, an administrator and representative of the native people, as a knowing interpreter of the local customs. He then made an agreement to lower yearly dues and started the first Portuguese
mint in the East, after complaints from merchants and Timoji about the scarcity of currency. ==Later life and death==