In Russia during the imperial and soviet periods society evolved from tradition to modernity. As a result, advanced industrial technologies emerged, along with the corresponding political, cultural, and social mechanisms that made possible the maintenance, use, and management of these technologies. Imperial modernization followed the classic European scenario. In its goals, means, and results Soviet modernization served as the continuation of this. While Soviet modernization was reminiscent of the classic Western model in some respects (the formation of the rational, educated, secular-minded individual; industrialization; urbanization; the democratization of the family; the emancipation of women and children), it differed from the model in others (the priority of the state over society, the supremacy of the collective over the individual, the restriction of the freedom of the individual, centralization, central planning). In sum, the formula of Soviet modernization amounted to technological and material progress on a foundation of traditional social institutions. Soviet modernization achieved a lower rate of development and came at a higher cost to society than imperial modernization. Nevertheless, were it not for the enormous and utterly unjustifiable human sacrifices, one could consider Soviet modernization successful even though, as had imperial modernization, it ended in crisis and revolution. Soviet modernization succeeded imperial modernization as a result of the armed revolution of 1917, while post-Soviet modernization replaced the Soviet version after the peaceful revolution of 1991–1993, but these facts do not mean that both modernizations never happened, or that they failed. Imperial modernization encompassed mostly the educated levels of society, the upper strata, a significant share of the urban population, and the part of the peasantry that supported the Stolypin reforms. The population groups enumerated here overlapped to some extent, hence their proportion of the general population barely exceeded 30–35 percent. The lion’s share of the population, living primarily in the countryside, experienced modernization only slightly. Moreover, a significant part of this group reacted to fundamental modernization processes either negatively (such as commercialization and social and material bourgeois differentiation) or with indifference. Soviet modernization involved the entire society, and its effects proved to be deeper and more all-encompassing. Judging by the results of both modernizations, one can consider them fairly successful projects on the whole, although they also did not meet all the challenges and expectations placed upon them. Post-Soviet modernization also did not resolve all of the old problems and at the same time created many new ones. But it is far from complete and rendering a verdict on it is premature. Nevertheless, it is already possible to say that the political, cultural, and social rapprochement with the West over the last 20 years has been unprecedented in history. And this is natural: convergence had been the main trend in the development of Europe from the 18th to the 20th centuries, and in recent decades has transformed into worldwide globalization.