hebrew months are diffrent than the english calander. on any given year, janurary can turn out on the hebrew,tevet,or shvat. dipends on the year this 2014 year it is going to be in the begining tevet , and on the 2nd it willbe shvat.
It always falls on the 10th of Tevet, on the Hebrew calendar. It varies on the western calendar, but it is usually in January.
The Gregorian Calendar is solar and the Hebrew Calendar is lunisolar.
In the Hebrew calendar, the month of Av is followed by the month of Elul.
as of January 2013, the current Hebrew year is 5773. (China and India use the Gregorian calendar for years, so it is 2013 on both calendars).
April is the first month of the ancient Hebrew calendar, and for good reason. The Gregorian calendar has the beginning of the year in January just as winter is beginning to get to it's coldest two month. Ancient hebrews put the beginning of the year in spring wich is the first station of the year wich is a more logical calendar. December in ancient Hebrew calendar would be the ninth month.
8 Shvat, 5715 (ח׳ בשבט, תשט״ו)
1 week = 1 week on the Hebrew calendar. (The Hebrew week is the same length as the week on the Western calendar)
There isn't any festival celebrated along with Christmas as per the Hebrew calendar, since Christmas is not tied to the Hebrew calendar. (So every year, Christmas falls on a different date on the Hebrew calendar).
The Hebrew calendar is used in Israel, and by Jews all over the world.
In the Hebrew calendar, the month of Nissan immediately precedes Iyar.
A Hebrew calendar website can help you with that.
The Hebrew month Adar is the same in all countries. It is a Spring month.