Fancica started his ecclesiastical career as one of the influential royal chaplains of
Ladislaus I of Hungary. In this capacity, he played an important role in the foundation of the
Diocese of Zagreb, when he was sent to inaugurate and consecrate its first bishop,
Duh around 1090 (there is a scholarly debate about the exact date of the diocese's establishment). In the same time, another royal chaplain
Cupan (or Koppány) was commissioned to donate the village of
Dubrava (Dombró) with its people, lands and forests to the newly erected diocese. Fancica was among those royal chaplains of Ladislaus, along with
Seraphin,
Lawrence and Cupan, who later emerged into bishopric positions during the reigns of Ladislaus' successors. By the reign of
Stephen II of Hungary, at least from around 1125–28, Fancica was made Bishop of Zagreb. According to Croatian historian
Ivan Tkalčić, he already held dignity since 1114 or 1115 (his last known predecessor,
Manasses was mentioned as bishop of "Zagorje" [i.e. plausibly Zagreb] by the two royal charters of King
Coloman regarding the
Zobor Abbey, issued in 1111 and 1113). During the episcopate of Fancica, a certain nobleman Sungenga (Szundenya) questioned the rightful ownership of the Diocese of Zagreb over the forest of Dubrava, as a result the bishop petitioned to the royal court of Stephen II. The king entrusted
Felician, Archbishop of Esztergom to investigate the lawsuit. According to historian László Koszta, it proves that the Diocese of Zagreb was one of the suffragans of the
Archdiocese of Esztergom during that time (while, later, it belonged to the Archdiocese of Kalocsa by mid-12th century). Fancica was transferred to the Archbishopric of Kalocsa in 1131. He was referred to as "archbishop of Bács" () in the sole document, which mentioned him in this capacity. During the reign of
Béla II of Hungary, the rightful ownership of Zagreb over the estate Dubrava was again contested. Therefore, Archbishop Felician, who summoned a provincial synod to the
Cathedral Basilica of Várad (today
Oradea, Romania) in 1134, again judged over the lawsuit in favor of the Diocese of Zagreb. Fancica also attended the event and appeared in the verdict as a testimony. Felician's judgement definitely says that Fancica was succeeded as Bishop of Zagreb by
Macilinus – now a defendant at the trial – in the year 1131. Fancica died sometime after 1134. A falsified charter dated to 1135 lists one Archbishop
Simon of Kalocsa. Taking into account that the document was based on a charter issued in the reign of King Béla II, it is plausible that Simon was elevated to the rank of archbishop in the second half of the 1130s. ==References==