Roman forces in the Balkans follow the Slavic invaders everywhere but do not dare to fight them, because the Slavs are too numerous.
In 550, the Sclaveni reach a point about forty miles (sixty-five kilometers) from Constantinople.
Procopius writes the Secret History around this time.
Covering roughly the same years as the first seven books of the History of Justinian's Wars, it appears to have been written after they were published.
Current consensus generally dates it to 550 or 558, or maybe even as late as 562.
The Secret History reveals an author who had become deeply disillusioned with the emperor Justinian and his wife, Empress Theodora, as well as Belisarius, his former commander and patron, and Antonina, Belisarius' wife.
The anecdotes claim to expose the secret springs of their public actions, as well as the private lives of the emperor, his wife and their entourage.
Justinian is portrayed as cruel, venal, prodigal and incompetent; as for Theodora, the reader is treated to the most detailed and titillating portrayals of vulgarity and insatiable lust combined with shrewish and calculating mean-spiritedness.
Discovered centuries later in the Vatican Library and published by Niccolò Alamanni in 1623 at Lyons, its existence was already known from the Suda, which referred to it as the Anekdota (Latin Anecdota, "unpublished writings").