Poppo,
When I saw the name Cicero I was thinking about the famous Roman / Italian and that it might indicate an interest in Roman times.
That is Cicero the Roman philosopher, politician, lawyer, orator, political theorist, consul and constitutionalist.
I learnt all about him at my school in England as he was particularly important in Ceasars time and ended up getting murdered.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cicero
A para from Wiki
While Cicero the humanist deeply influenced the culture of the Renaissance, Cicero the republican inspired the Founding Fathers of the United States and the revolutionaries of the French Revolution.[71] John Adams said of him "As all the ages of the world have not produced a greater statesman and philosopher united than Cicero, his authority should have great weight."[72] Jefferson names Cicero as one of a handful of major figures who contributed to a tradition “of public right” that informed his draft of the Declaration of Independence and shaped American understandings of "the common sense" basis for the right of revolution.[73] Camille Desmoulins said of the French republicans in 1789 that they were "mostly young people who, nourished by the reading of Cicero at school, had become passionate enthusiasts for liberty".[74] Jim Powell starts his book on the history of liberty with the sentence: "Marcus Tullius Cicero expressed principles that became the bedrock of liberty in the modern world." Legitimate government protects liberty and justice according to "natural law." "Murray N. Rothbard praised Cicero as 'the great transmitter of Stoic ideas from Greece to Rome. ... Stoic natural law doctrines ... helped shape the great structures of Roman law which became pervasive in Western Civilization." Government's purpose was the protection of private property.[75]
Perhaps he is not as well known as I thought.
Regards
Brett