This is a second edition of Lang's well-known textbook. It covers all of the basic material of classical algebraic
number theory, giving the student the background necessary for the study of further topics in algebraic number
theory, such as cyclotomic fields, or modular forms. Part I introduces some of the basic ideas of the theory: number
fields, ideal classes, ideles and adeles, and zeta functions. It also contains a version of a Riemann-Roch theorem
in number fields, proved by Lang in the very first version of the book in the sixties. This version can now be
seen as a precursor of Arakelov theory. Part II covers class field theory, and Part III is devoted to analytic
methods, including an exposition of Tate's thesis, the Brauer-Siegel theorem, and Weil's explicit formulas. This
new edition contains corrections, as well as several additions to the previous edition, and the last chapter on
explicit formulas has been rewritten.
Part I: General Basic Theory
1. Algebraic Integers
2. Completeness
3. The Different and the Discriminant
4. Cyclotomic Felds
5. Paralellotopes
6. The Ideal Function
7. Ideles and Adeles
8. Elemetary Properties of the Zeta Function and L-series
Part II: Class Field Theory
9. Norm Index Computations
10. The Artin Symbol
11. The Existence Theorem and Class Field Theory
12. L-series Again
Part III: Analytic Theory
13. Functional Equation of the Zeta Function, Hecke's Proof
14. Functional Equations, Tate's Thesis
15. Density of Primes and Tauberian Theorem
16. The Brauer-Siegel Theorem
17. Explicit Formulas