Aims: This study aims to analyze the policies of scientific, cultural, and urban modernization pursued by Peter I in Russia during the period 1689–1725, and to evaluate their success in bringing about a comprehensive transformation in Russian society. It further seeks to uncover the limitations of these reforms and their social and cultural impacts, as well as to determine whether they contributed to the modernization of society as a whole or remained confined to enhancing the capacities of the state and the ruling elites. Methodology: The study adopted a mixed methodology that combined quantitative analysis of demographic data, educational indicators, and literacy rates, with qualitative analysis of official texts, including decrees and contemporary correspondence. It focused on three principal axes: scientific advancement through the establishment of educational institutions and the recruitment of foreign expertise; cultural transformation resulting from westernization policies; and urban development associated with the founding of the city of Saint Petersburg. Results: The findings indicate that educational reforms achieved only limited progress in terms of societal reach, benefiting approximately five thousand students out of a total population of fifteen million. Literacy rates among the nobility increased from 40% to 90%, while they remained below 2% among the peasantry, who constituted the majority of the population. The study also revealed that westernization policies contributed to the emergence of a cultural cleavage between an elite influenced by European models and a majority adhering to Orthodox traditions. Urban modernization was concentrated primarily in the city of Saint Petersburg, the construction of which entailed a high human cost estimated at between thirty thousand and one hundred thousand laborers. Conclusions: It can be concluded that the modernization project led by Peter I constituted a selective, top-down, state-directed modernization. It succeeded in building a militarily and institutionally powerful state and in enhancing Russia's international standing, but it did not achieve a profound social transformation encompassing all segments of society. The study affirms the importance of critically reexamining imposed top-down modernization models, taking into account their human cost and their long-term social and cultural consequences. It further recommends conducting comparative studies with modernization experiences in the Ottoman, Chinese, and Japanese empires to understand historical patterns of modernization and to derive relevant lessons.
Iman Jawad Hadi Al Barazanji (Mon,) studied this question.