I am interested in generalizations of the following fact (known as automatic continuity, as pointed out below). I am especially looking for references to papers dating back to 1920’s. I feel that question like these have been well-studied when people were still interested in set-theoretic aspects of analysis...
(Cauchy) Any measurable automorphism $ (\Bbb{R},+) \to (\Bbb{R},+) $ is necessarily a linear function, and any measurable homomorphism $ (\Bbb{R},+) \to (\Bbb{R}^{\times},\times) $ is necessarily an exponential function $ x \mapsto e^{a x} $.
Is something similar true for homomorphisms $ f: (\Bbb{C},+) \to (\Bbb{C},+) $ or $ f: (\Bbb{C},+) \to (\Bbb{C}^{\times},\times) $ (assuming that $ \ker(f) = \Bbb{Z} $ in the latter)? (Yes, see answers below.)
That is, I am interested in facts which follow the following rough pattern:
If a map is not set-theoretically wild, e.g. it is measurable or Borel, and satisfies some identities, then it is in fact continuous, and, furthermore, it can be given by an explicit formula.