The present book grew out of introductory lectures on the theory
offunctions of several variables. Its intent is to make the reader
familiar, by the discussion of examples and special cases, with the most
important branches and methods of this theory, among them, e.g., the
problems of holomorphic continuation, the algebraic treatment of power
series, sheaf and cohomology theory, and the real methods which stem
from elliptic partial differential equations. In the first chapter we
begin with the definition of holomorphic functions of several variables,
their representation by the Cauchy integral, and their power series
expansion on Reinhardt domains. It turns out that, in l: ontrast 2 there
exist domains G, G c en to the theory of a single variable, for n with G
c G and G "# G such that each function holomorphic in G has a
continuation on G. Domains G for which such a G does not exist are
called domains of holomorphy. In Chapter 2 we give several
characterizations of these domains of holomorphy (theorem of
Cartan-Thullen, Levi's problem). We finally construct the holomorphic
hull H(G} for each domain G, that is the largest (not necessarily
schlicht) domain over en into which each function holomorphic on G can
be continued.