Childhood and priesthood Giuseppe Marello was born on 26 December 1844 on Bakers' Street in
Turin to Vincenzo Marello and Anna Maria Viale, and he was
baptized just hours later in the Corpus Domini church. He had a younger brother named Vittorio. His
godparents were Chiaffredo Viale and Teresa Secco. He received his Confirmation on 15 August 1855 from the
Bishop of Asti Filippo Artico. He was an
altar server in his childhood, and he often invited the homeless to his home for food. His father was a friend of
Giuseppe Benedetto Cottolengo. Marello's mother died on 5 April 1848, and in 1852 his father decided to relocate with his children to
San Martino Alfieri, where his paternal grandparents resided. Marello began his studies for the priesthood on 31 October 1856, but his father wished him to continue with his education and take up a career in business. But in December 1863 Giuseppe contracted
typhus and promised the
Virgin Mary that if he survived he would continue his studies to become a priest. He recovered, and attributed the cure to
Our Lady of Consolation. He continued on with his ecclesial studies in February 1864. At one stage he considered becoming a
Carthusian monk, but the new Bishop of Asti, Carlo Savio, dissuaded him, suggesting that God had other plans for him. Marello underwent the clerical investiture on 9 January 1864, and received both the
tonsure and all
minor orders from Bishop Savio on 21 December 1867. He was made a subdeacon on 28 March 1868, and was elevated to the
diaconate on 6 June 1868. Marello was ordained to the priesthood on 19 September 1868 with Savio again officiating. The new priest celebrated his first
Mass on 20 September 1868 in San Martino Alfieri. After his ordination, he became the private assistant to Bishop Savio at
Asti on 21 October 1868. He served in that capacity until 1881. On 2 March 1880 he was named a Canon of the
Asti Cathedral. He was also friends with
Giovanni Bosco and
Leonardo Murialdo. He attended the
First Vatican Council with Bishop Savio and it was there that he met Cardinal Gioacchino Pecci – the future
Pope Leo XIII – who praised the priest for his virtues and talents. He and Savio went to
Rome on 21 November 1869 and were there until late July 1870; he even had the chance to meet
Pope Pius IX. His father died on 17 May 1873. Later he took over an Asti
retirement home to save it from being bankrupt and he soon became the spiritual director and catechist in his local diocese. On 14 March 1878 he founded the
Oblates of Saint Joseph which would be dedicated to caring for the poor and educating children and adolescents as well as rendering assisting bishops in whatever capacities were required.
Episcopate Pope Leo XIII appointed him
Bishop of Acqui on 11 February 1889. The formal appointment as a bishop came on 11 February 1889 during a consistory for the elevation of new cardinals after having received word of his appointment in November 1888 (in the late morning) since the pope wanted to invest new bishops with the
rochet at the consistory. From 5:30 to 6:15pm on 10 February he met with the pope and that evening had dinner with Cardinal
Luigi Oreglia di Santo Stefano. He received his
episcopal consecration on 17 February, from Cardinal
Raffaele Monaco La Valletta in the
Capuchin Santa Maria della Concezione dei Cappuccini in Rome. The co-consecrators were the Archbishop of Chieti Rocco Cocchia and the Archbishop of Damiata Ignazio Persico. He visited all the parishes in his diocese and wrote six
pastoral letters to his flock. He issued his first pastoral letter on the subject of peace on 31 May 1889 and issued another on 2 February 1890 regarding a pastoral visitation that he would undertake. From 13 April 1890 to 1895 he visited 143 individual parishes. On 16 December 1890 he received an
honorary degree in
sacred theology from the Theological College of Saint Thomas in
Genoa, and then issued a third pastoral letter regarding
penance on 13 January 1891. On 26 September 1891 he participated in a pilgrimage to Rome for the third centennial of the death of
Aloysius Gonzaga and later on 4 February 1892 issued another pastoral letter on the subject of Christian education. Bishop Marello issued another one on 25 January 1893 regarding the profession of faith. From 14 to 28 February 1893 he went to Rome to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Pope Leo XIII's episcopal consecration though on 23 February made a detour to
Naples to visit the
Pompeii shrine. He issued another pastoral letter on catechism on 20 January 1894 and a final one on 8 February 1895 regarding missions and the propagation of the faith.
Death Marello travelled to
Savona, arriving on 26 May, to participate in a celebration of the third centennial of
Philip Neri. He died of a
cerebral hemorrhage on 30 May 1895. Marello was due to leave a week after the centennial celebration, but wanted to offer his respects to Bishop Giuseppe Boraggini of the
diocese of Savona (1879–1897), who was not there, and so Marello decided to stay longer in the town until Boraggini's return; this was on 27 May 1895, after he celebrated what would be his final Mass. Marello first went on a Marian pilgrimage in the town and then called on the bishop that evening; he was exhausted but accepted a dinner invitation. But as the bishop showed him the room where
Pope Pius VII was once confined in he fainted and was rushed to a bed. The illness did not seem at all serious, so his aide telegrammed the Acqui diocese vicar-general to give word the illness would keep the bishop out of his see for a little while. But his acute headaches caused even the slightest noise to torment him. On 28 May his two doctors thought they saw an improvement that indicated he might soon be able to leave, but the bishop's condition deteriorated on 29 May, and grew worse around 4:30pm on 30 May, when he managed with difficulty to utter a few garbled and incoherent words. The cerebral hemorrhage claimed his life at 6:00pm on 30 May. His funeral was celebrated on 1 June. Leo XIII said of his death at a general audience in Rome in 1891: "he was a gem among bishops". His remains were exhumed and relocated to his order's motherhouse on 30 June 1923. His order received diocesan approval on 18 March 1901 and papal approval from
Pope Pius X on 11 April 1909. ==Parish==