Abstract
In order to have a better understanding of social Catholicism in Spain, it is necessary to study various social institutions, our knowledge of which is still fragmentary. This article presents the repercussions that the Social Doctrine of the Church had in Zamora and analyzes one of its first projects: the Catholic Circle of San Martin Cid, founded in 1891, which went from being a center of instruction and recreation to a place to promote other social initiatives. Similarly, we show the involvement of the Carlists in the social projects of the Church and the relationship between social Catholicism and the Labor Movement.
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