The Church of St John the Baptist in Axbridge, Somerset, England, was built in the 13th century and has been designated as a grade 1 listed building.
Work on the current building began in the early 15th century and grew from an earlier building dating back to about 1230. The church is built of limestone and decorated with Doulting stone.
The crossing tower, which was built around 1400, is over 100 feet high and holds six bells, one of which dates from 1723 and was made by Edward Bilbie. The statue on the east side is that of St John the Baptist. On the west side is a king, perhaps Henry VII, which would place it after 1485. The North aisle ceiling retains some mediaeval painted panels, and amongst the carved bosses is the head of a Green Man, with leaves sprouting around his face. The nave roof is Jacobean and dates from 1636. John Dando Sedding restored the church in the 1880s.