Semyon Ivanov Dezhnyov (born c. 1605, Veliky Ustyug, Russia—died early 1673, Moscow) was a Russian explorer, the first European known to have sailed through the Bering Strait.
Dezhnyov served as a Cossack in Siberia, where he traveled a great deal in the north beginning in the early 1640s. In 1648 he sailed from the Kolyma River eastward to the Bering Strait, rounding the northeast tip of Asia (now called Cape Dezhnyov) and reaching the Anadyr River. He thus proved the separation of Asia and North America, but his report lay buried in the archives at Yakutsk until the German historian Gerhard Friedrich Müller found it in 1736, so the discovery was not known about until nearly a century had passed and after Vitus Bering and others had explored the area.