was the 10th daimyà  of Kubota Domain in Dewa Province, Japan (modern-day Akita Prefecture), and the 28th hereditary chieftain of the Satake clan. His courtesy title was Ukyà Â-no-daifu and Jijà « and later raised to Sakonoeshà Âshà  and his Court rank was Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade.
Satake Yoshihiro was the eldest son of Satake Yoshimasa and became daimyà  on his father's death in 1815. Although Yoshimasa insisted on his deathbed that be succeeded by the head of Iwasaki Domain due to the extreme youth of Yoshihiro, a number of his senior retainers strenuously objected and insisted that Yoshihiro be recognized as daimyà Â. He was received in formal audience by Shà Âgun Tokugawa Ienari in 1824 and his position was confirmed. In 1836, the domain petitioned that he be accorded the courtesy title of Sakonoeshà Âshà  as this had been hereditary to the Satake clan; however, the shà Âgunate refused, as the previous four generations of Satake daimyà  had all died relatively young and had not be awarded the title. The domain petitioned again in 1838, and was successful, albeit at a cost of 2877 ryà Â.
Although his father Satake Yoshimasu had been a great leader who had made giant steps to reform the domain and its finances, Yoshihiro's youth, inexperience and obsession with a vanity title, combined with repeated crop failures plunged the domain back into massive debt. Although Yoshihiro imposed sumptuary laws, crackdowns on illicit trade and violations of domain monopolies, and land reclamation around the Oga Peninsula, expenses continued to mount due to increasing demands from the shà Âgunate to bolster Japan's northern defenses. The domain's economic situation continued to deteriorate rather than to improve. Yoshiro died in 1846 at the age of 34.
He was married to Eihime (1812-1840), a daughter of Maeda Toshitsuyo of Toyama Domain, and after her death remarried to Tadahime, a daughter of Ikeda Naritoshi of Tottori Domain.