I used to own a house built in 1670 in random stone with random rubble back fill, walls were about 2½ ft thick. So, long before dpc's were thought of and a potential dampness nightmare.
Here's what I did, rather similar to your proposal in some respects.
I dug a trench, tight to the walls right around the house about 2ft deep and 18" wide, laid to a fall obviously. I put perforated land drainage pipe in the base of the trench, leading to a soakaway.
The trench was back-filled with 3/4" CLEAN filter media (stone). (Definitely don't use pea gravel) I specified that most emphatically to the quarry, who obviously took it on board because the first thing the driver asked on delivery was "is this clean enough?"
The principle here is that the filter stone is too knobbly to have many contact points, so water cannot pass across the "trench" and has to go down - to the base land drain. Being clean, there is no fine stuff to aid water movement across.
Then to cap it all off, because of the random stone construction of the walls, I specified an internal electro-osmotic damp proof course. Funny, the "specialist damp proofing installer" hadn't got a clue what I was talking about. I said, "let me explain . . . "
But it was a dry old . . . very old, house.
Food for thought for your solution?